Abstract
Purpose
Previous studies have indicated fungi might contribute substantially to soil N2O production under the acidic conditions. Yet, the fungal contribution to N2O emission in an acidic tea soil has been rarely reported. The objectives of the present research were to determine the fungal and bacterial contribution to N2O emission and identify, characterize N2O-producing fungal isolates, and testify their ability in producing N2O via inoculating strains to the sterilized acidic tea soil.
Materials and methods
Two antibiotics (cycloheximide and streptomycin) combined with substrate-induced respiration (SIR) method were used in a microcosm experiment. Rose-Bengal medium was used to isolate the N2O-producing fungi. The active fungal strains were identified on the basis of 18S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) gene sequencing and then were inoculated into sterile soil and nonsterile soil in an incubation experiment.
Results and discussion
Fungal denitrification comprised 70% of N2O production in this tea soil. Two fungi, namely Penicillium and Hypocrea, were isolated from tea soils at the pH of 3.8. N2O emission from Penicillium strain was 328 μg g−1 biomass, showing at least two orders of magnitude greater than that of Hypocrea strain. The inoculation of Penicillium strain into sterile or nonsterile soils suggested a significant contribution of fungal denitrification to N2O production in the tea soil. The relative contribution of fungi in this study was more intensified than the reported studies, suggesting that denitrifying fungi might turn to be more tolerant and dominant in this acidic soil, thus resulting to greater fungal contribution to N2O production.
Conclusions
Fungal denitrification might play an important role in N2O emission in this highly acidic tea soil. Our finding might help to predict N2O emissions from acidic soils and provoke practicable methods to mitigate soil N2O emissions.
Similar content being viewed by others
Explore related subjects
Discover the latest articles, news and stories from top researchers in related subjects.Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
1 Introduction
Nitrous oxide (N2O) is one of the main greenhouse gases that strongly influence the global climate change. As the major source of N2O emission, soils contribute approximately 65% of N2O emission in the atmosphere (Smith and Conen 2004). Denitrification is an important microbial process of N2O production, especially in soils under O2 limited conditions or with large amounts of NO3 − (Hefting et al. 2003). Nitrous oxide can be produced as the intermediate or final product of denitrification in the reduction of NO3 − to N2.
Tea is one of the important economic crops, planting on acid red soils of South China (Xue et al. 2010). The planting area of tea in China was 2.74 million hm2 in 2014, accounting for 74.8% at the global scale (FAO 2014). Tea orchards have generally developed as a monoculture and were applied with increasing N fertilization to obtain higher yield and quality. Therefore, the soil pH decreases gradually and high amounts of N2O release into the atmosphere. Tokuda and Hayatsu (2004) showed that N2O flux in the tea soil could be possibly strengthened by long-term heavy application of N fertilizer and soil acidification. The mean flux of N2O in tea soils and rice paddy soils were 24.3 and 0.36 kg N ha−1, respectively (Akiyama et al. 2006). These studies indicated that the application of N fertilizer as well as soil acidification has an important effect on the nitrogen cycle in the tea garden soil.
Soil pH, the available nitrogen substrates, oxygen limitation, and organic carbon availability are the key factors that affect denitrification. The proportion of N2O in denitrification processes generally increased with decreasing soil pH (Barton et al. 2013). Previous studies had showed that soil fungi rather than bacteria dominated the N2O production in acidic soil (Ma et al. 2008; Rütting et al. 2013; Chen et al. 2014). The greater contribution of fungi to N2O production was probably owing to the domination of fungal community under low pH conditions (Strickland and Rousk 2010) while soil bacteria are more sensitive to acidic conditions (Fierer and Jackson 2006). Denitrification can even occur under the presence of O2 (Tokuda and Hayatsu 2000; Takaya et al. 2003), implying the potential significance of aerobic denitrification (Bateman and Baggs 2005). Unlike bacterial denitrification that needs strict anaerobic condition for nitrate or nitrite reduction, fungal denitrification even requires small amounts of O2 (Zhou et al. 2001). The dominant microbial process of denitrification has been attributed to bacteria for over a century, recently fungal denitrification has been proposed as one of such domination in specific environments, e.g., acidic soils (Zumft 1997). A large number of studies have demonstrated that higher fungal dominance in acid soil leads to higher N2O emission (Laughlin and Stevens 2002; Strickland and Rousk 2010; Rütting et al. 2013). Our earlier research also showed an important role of acidophilic denitrifiers in N2O production in this acid tea soil (Huang et al. 2015). However, the mechanisms of dominant contributor (fungi or bacteria) in producing N2O are not fully understood. Therefore, the objectives were to (i) detect the contribution to N2O emission from fungi and bacteria and (ii) identify, characterize N2O-producing fungal isolates, and testify their ability in producing N2O by the inoculation of strains to the acidic tea soil.
2 Materials and methods
2.1 Soil sampling and description
Soil sampling was performed in a 100-year-old tea garden (constructed on a landfill in 1914) in the West Lake District of Hangzhou, China. The soil was classified as red soil by the China Classification System and was derived from quartzose sandstone interbedded with shales. Triplicate samples, each including eight soil cores (5 cm × 10 cm), were collected randomly from four sampling plots. The collected soils were mixed and sieved (<2 mm). Then one part was air dried for chemical analysis and the other part was stored at 4 °C for about a week prior to microcosm experiment. Information on fertilization, farming management has been described in our previous studies (Huang et al. 2015) and selected soil properties were organic carbon (C) at 95.1 g kg−1, total N at 5.1 g kg−1, pH (1:2.5 H2O) at 3.8, Bray 1-P at 79.1 mg kg−1 soil, and microbial biomass C at 311.4 μg g−1.
2.2 Optimal concentrations of two antibiotics
To evaluate the contribution to soil N2O production from fungi and bacteria, cycloheximide and streptomycin were used to inhibit fungal and bacterial activities in soils, respectively. To avoid overlapping inhibition of cycloheximide or streptomycin on bacteria and fungi, respectively, the SIR inhibition method was used to optimize concentrations of cycloheximide and streptomycin (Anderson and Domsch 1973). Soil CO2 flux rate was determined in control soil (no antibiotic); soils treated with cycloheximide at 2.0, 6.0, and 10.0 mg g−1 dry soil; soils treated with streptomycin at 2.0, 6.0, and 12.0 mg g−1 dry soil; and soils treated with both the combination of two antibiotics. We used inhibitor additivity ratio (IAR) to evaluate nontarget inhibition of cycloheximide and streptomycin (BeareMH et al. 1990; Seo and Delaune 2010). IAR value was calculated by:(A − B) + (A − C)/A − D, where A, B, C, and D represents CO2 flux rates from control soil, streptomycin-treated soil, cycloheximide-treated soil, and both antibiotics-treated soils, successively. The IAR value at 1.0 implies the usable concentrations of both antibiotics that have no nontarget inhibition effect. The minimum available concentrations for two antibiotics were streptomycin at 6.0 mg g−1 dry soil and cycloheximide at 10.0 mg g−1 dry soil, respectively.
2.3 The contribution of soil fungi and bacteria to N2O emissions
A microcosm experiment was replicated three times with the following treatments: (1) soil with no antibiotics, (2) soil with streptomycin at 6.0 mg g−1 dry soil, (3) soil with cycloheximide at 10.0 mg g−1 dry soil, and (4) soil with streptomycin at 6.0 mg g−1 dry soil and cycloheximide at 10.0 mg g−1 dry soil. Firstly, soils (15 g dry weight) were collected into 120-ml flaks and preincubated for 2 days in the dark at 25 °C. Glucose was chosen as a substrate in this method because most known soil bacteria and fungi can use it as a source for energy and growth. Acetylene (10% v/v) was often used to inhibit bacterial N2O reduction to N2 and avoid underestimation of bacterial contribution. Therefore, soils from the above four treatments were added with 2 ml of glucose (5 mg g−1), KNO3 (0.1 mg N g−1) to sustain soil water content to 75% of maximum water holding capacity (MWHC). Secondly, the jars were sealed with rubber stoppers and aluminum covers after the addition of substrate solution. The slurries of soil were injected with or without 10% v/v C2H2 for the determination of N2O production rate. Thirdly, after 1 and 7 h, 3-ml gas samples were collected and N2O was instantly determined using robotized incubation system (Molstad et al. 2007). Soil N2O flux (mg h−1 kg−1 dry soil) in the headspace was calculated using the modified equation based on previous studies (Chen et al. 2014):
where 44 is the molar mass of N2O (g mol−1), C sample is the calculated N2O concentration of the gas sample (ppm) based on standard curve of N2O obtained by robotized incubation system, V is the volume of headspace (L), r is molar volume at 25 °C and 1 atm (24.436 L mol−1), m is the dry weight of soil (g), and t is the incubation time (h).
2.4 Isolation of N2O-producing fungal strain
Using a dilution plating method, fungal strains were isolated from the tea soil. Firstly, liquid Rose-Bengal medium (10 g glucose, 5 g peptone, 0.5 g MgSO4·7H2O, 1 g KH2PO4, 3.3 mL 1% Rose-Bengal solution and in 1 L distilled H2O) was prepared. The solution was added with appropriate 0.5 M H2SO4 to adjust the pH of medium to 3.8 and 20 g agar including 100 mg mL−1 streptomycin sulfate to provide a bacteria-free microcosm (Yanai et al. 2007). Secondly, soil slurry composing of 10:1 buffer (mL) to soil (g) ratio was successively diluted up to the 10−5 level and 0.2 mL of each diluent was inoculated into the solid culture medium. Thirdly, inoculated mediums were incubated aerobically at 30 °C for up to a week. Fungal colonies based on different colony morphology were selected and repeated plate streaking to obtain pure cultures. After that, hyphae were transferred from individual colonies into new mediums. Additional four transfers were also carried out to obtain pure colonies that were kept in Rose-Bengal medium and placed at 4 °C.
To prevent the bacterial contribution to N2O production, purified fungal isolates were detected for N2O-emitting ability in a liquid Rose-Bengal medium including streptomycin to avoid bacterial contamination. In addition, four treatments were used to evaluate N2O emission from the liquid medium was either a fungal or chemical reaction: the medium alone, the medium containing 2 g L−1 KNO3, the medium containing isolated strain, the medium containing isolated strain, and 2 g L−1 KNO3. Each colony was inoculated into 120-mL amber jars with 25 mL liquid medium. The jar was first sealed with cotton wool and kept in an incubator at 37 °C for 72 h. The cotton wool was then removed and each jar was closed with a rubber stopper. After the certain incubation time, 3-mL gas samples were collected and N2O was instantly determined as previously described. To determine the biomass of each fungal isolate (g−1 dry mycelium), the Rose-Bengal medium solution was filtered through a 0.45-mm filter paper, dried for 48 h at 80 °C, and then was weighed by an electronic balance.
2.5 Identification of N2O-emitting fungal strains
First, pure colonies of each fungal strain were sustained in the Rose-Bengal medium solution for 1 week at 37 °C. Then, the solution was gathered and transferred to a 1.5-mL centrifuge tubes. DNA was extracted from each culture by Bioteke new rapid plant DNA extraction kit (Bioteke Corporation) based on the instructions of the manufacturer. The primers NS1 (5′-GTAGTCATATGCTTGTCTC-3′) and NS8 (5′-TCCGCAGGTTCACCTACGGA-3′) (Invitrogen Life Technologies, Shanghai, China) were used for amplifying the 18S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) from total DNA extracts (Martin and Rygiewicz 2005). PCR reaction included 2 μL of 5 ng DNA, 0.5 μL of 10 μM of each primer 12.5 μL Promega Gotaq DNA polymerase, added to a total volume of 25 μL with sterile Milli-Q water. Gene amplification was conducted in a GeneAmp PCR System 9700 Thermal Cycler consisted of an initial denaturation at 95 °C for 5 min, followed by 30 cycles at 95 °C for 1 min, 56 °C for 1 min and 72 °C for 1 min, and a final extension at 72 °C for 10 min. PCR reactions of each sample were directly performed sequencing after purification. Translated gene sequences were aligned with reference fungal sequences using ClustalW implemented in BioEdit (Hall 1999). Phylogenetic trees were established with distance matrices and the neighbor-joining method in MEGA 5.0.
2.6 Determination of the potential N2O production activities of isolated fungal strains in soil
Soils were divided into 72 microcosms of 50 g before sterilization by γ-ray radiation (35 kGy, Compton Irradiation Technology Co., Ltd, Fujian, China). In this soil microcosm experiment, four sterile treatments with three replicates were carried out: nitrate (100 mg N/kg dry soil) and Penicillium solution (SNP), Penicillium solution (SP), nitrate solution (SN), control (SC). Two nonsterilized treatments with three replicates were also carried out as control: nitrate and Penicillium solution (NP), nitrate solution (N). Soils (equivalent to 50 g dry weight) were mixed with Penicillium solution (mycelium spore suspension 2.7 × 107 per 1 mL) and/or nitrate solution and then packed into each sterilized 120-ml serum bottle. Then bottles were sealed with sterilized rubber stoppers and aluminum covers and then transferred to the room temperature (25 °C) incubator. We incubated soils for 15 days at 75% of MWHC by adding appropriate sterile purified water. After days 3, 4, 7 and 15, 3-mL gas samples were collected and N2O concentration was instantly determined as Section 2.3 described.
2.7 Statistical analysis
An ANOVA was performed to determine the least significant difference (LSD) between samples using SPSS 19.0 and the P values <0.05 was considered significant. LSD and Dunnet’s T3 tests were performed respectively based on the test of homogeneity of variances. The frequency and distribution of the denitrifier genotypes using 1000 permutations were evaluated. Based upon the evolutionary distance (maximum likelihood algorithm with Jukes–Cantor model, 1000 bootstrap repetitions performed), the phylogenetic trees of the 18S rRNA gene were established using MEGA 5.0.
3 Results
3.1 The optimal concentration of antibiotics we used
Minimum concentrations of detected antibiotics were streptomycin at 6.0 mg g−1 dry soil and cycloheximide at 10.0 mg g−1 dry soil, respectively. Below or above these concentrations, the IAR value was greater or less than 1.0, suggesting noticeable overlapping inhibitory effects. Figure 1 showed the curves that used for the calculation of the ratio of bacterial to fungal respiration in the tea soils. Half of soil CO2 flux rates were reduced in both streptomycin and cycloheximide-treated soils. The respiration reduction was higher in cycloheximide-treated soils than that in streptomycin-treated soils, regardless of incubation hours.
3.2 Soil N2O emissions from fungi and bacteria
N2O fluxes from control, cycloheximide-amended, and streptomycin-amended soils were 10.1, 3.4, and 7.8 mg kg−1 h−1, respectively. Therefore, soil N2O flux decreased approximately 70% in cycloheximide-amended soils while soil N2O flux decreased by 23% in streptomycin-amended treatments. Though both cycloheximide and streptomycin addition significantly (P < 0.05) reduced soil N2O production rate, it showed no significant difference with that in cycloheximide-amended soils.
3.3 Isolated fungal strains
Two fungal species were obtained from the tea soil and were grown in a Rose-Bengal medium at pH 3.8. According to the morphological characteristics and the 18S rDNA phylogenetic analysis, the two strains were identified to be Penicillium and Hypocrea (Fig. S1, Electronic Supplementary Material), respectively. Nucleic acid sequence accession numbers in GenBank for Penicillium and Hypocrea are KJ680324 and KJ680323, respectively. Based on the partial 18S rRNA gene (Fig. S2, Electronic Supplementary Material), the phylogenetic tree suggested that two fungal strains isolated belonging to one cluster representing phyla Ascomycota. Isolate Penicillium strain (KJ680324) shared highly similar sequences with the N2O-producing Penicillium citrinum DAOM 221147 while Hypocrea strain (KJ680323) shared similar sequences with Bionectria ochroleuca WY-1 and Neocosmospora vasinfecta RSA 1942.
3.4 Denitrification activities of fungal strain
As shown in Section 2, N2O-emitting abilities of fungal strains were detected in a liquid nutrient medium at pH 3.8. The result suggested that N2O production significantly increased between 48 and 172 h in the medium treated with nitrate after Penicillium addition. The highest rate rose to 328 μg g−1 dry mycelium from Penicillium at 174 h (Fig. 2a). In comparison, no significant difference was observed in the N2O emission rate from Hypocrea and control, ranging from 0.6 to 2.5 μg g−1 dry mycelium (Fig. 2b).
3.5 The fungal strain with N2O-producing ability in the sterilized tea soil
After inoculated the N2O-producing Penicillium strain into γ-sterile soil, the N2O production rate varied from 20.4 to 73.7 nmol day−1 g−1 dry soil, which was significantly higher than SC and SN treatment (Fig. 3). In the SNP treatment, the rate ranging from 30.7 to 121.2 nmol day−1 g−1 dry soil was higher than that from NP treatment. However, the N2O production rate from NP treatment increased to a higher degree from the 9th day of incubation. No significant difference was observed in N2O emission rate from Hypocrea-inoculating incubation (data not shown).
With Penicillium strain inoculation, cumulative fluxes of N2O over the experimental period (15 days) were 0.41 and 0.31 mg kg−1 dry soil from sterile and nonsterile soils, respectively (Fig. 4). Meanwhile, the addition of nitrate increased the activity of N2O production and reached 0.46 and 0.57 mg kg−1 dry soil from sterile and nonsterile soils, respectively. The calculated contribution of fungi to denitrification processes in soils may reach 80% which is in agreement with the results obtained in the experiments with antibiotic selective inhibition.
4 Discussion
4.1 The contribution of fungal denitrification to soil N2O
Our earlier research indicated that bacterial denitrifiers dominated in this tea soils, suggesting an important role of acidophilic denitrifiers in N2O production (Huang et al. 2015). However, lack of relationship between N2O emission and denitrifying bacterial gene abundance implied that other unexamined denitrifying community, e.g., fungi, may also contribute to N2O emission in the tea soils. Therefore, both antibiotic and culture-dependent approaches were used to detect the relative contribution to N2O production from fungi and bacteria in this study. By using antibiotic inhibition method, the result suggested that fungal denitrification accounted for a higher percentage of N2O productions. Despite the highly acidic soil pH, soil fungi made a contribution of higher than 70% of N2O production. Large numbers of studies have demonstrated that the denitrification rate is strongly regulated by soil pH (Van Den Klemedtsson et al. 2010; Van Den Heuvel et al. 2011; Hu et al. 2013). Rousk et al. (2010) also showed that soil fungi are capable to grow over a wider range of pH and fungal community may be rarely affected by acidic pH. Under acidic conditions, the fungal dominance of N2O production was attributed to the prevailing growth of fungi (Chen et al. 2015a). The relative contribution of fungi in this study was more intensified than the reported studies (Laughlin et al. 2009; Herold et al. 2012; Chen et al. 2014), suggesting that denitrifying fungi turned to be more tolerant and dominant in this acidic soil (Baggs et al. 2010), thus resulting to greater fungal contribution to N2O production in the tea soil. By inoculating active fungal strain Fusarium oxysporum 11dn1 into sterile soil, previous studies showed a significant contribution of fungi to N2O emission under optimal conditions (Lavrent’ev et al. 2008). In this study, the fungal contribution to denitrification processes in soils can be evaluated via comparing our data in the intensity of N2O production by active strain Penicillium inoculated into the sterile nitrate-treated soil with that in the nonsterile nitrate-treated soil. The contribution of Penicillium strain to denitrification processes may reach 80% which is in agreement with the results obtained in the experiments with antibiotic selective inhibition.
4.2 Factors controlling fungal contribution to soil N2O flux
The dominance of fungal contribution to soil N2O flux has been demonstrated in the range of pH 0.5–4.0 in studies of woodlands, grasslands, and peatland (Laughlin and Stevens 2002; Laughlin et al. 2009; Yanai et al. 2007). Although under aerobic conditions, the results of our study were consistent with these studies. It should be noted that in our study Rose-Bengal medium around pH 3.8 was available for isolating soil fungi with N2O-producing ability. Two fungal species were identified from tea soil and Penicillium strain showed greater N2O production than Hypera strain (Fig. 2a). The strains of denitrifying fungi retrieved in this study were lower than those of the previous studies (Lavrent’ev et al. 2008; Mothapo et al. 2013), suggesting that specific species dominated the fungal N2O production in this tea soil. Oxygen limitation is another critical factor that control fungal denitrification in the sense that fungal denitrification required oxygen owing to the coexistence of oxic respiration system. Lavrent’ev et al. (2008) showed that fungal N2O production was generally greater under microaerobic conditions by inoculating F. oxysporum and Fusarium solani into sterile soils. In comparison, Chen et al. (2015b) found that fungi and bacteria enjoyed the same sub-anoxic environment for the greatest N2O production and fungal contribution declined if soil water content were higher than 65%. Our previous studies also demonstrated that denitrification is the major source of N2O production under aerobic conditions in this tea soil (Huang et al. 2014). In this study, significant N2O production from Penicillium strain after inoculated into nonsterile soil suggested that fungal denitrification could be satisfied fully at 75% WMHC. Therefore, results of this study indicated that fungal denitrification contributes greater N2O production under aerobic conditions in this acidic tea garden soil.
4.3 The specificity of the antibiotics method
The SIR inhibition method was first posed to determine the fungal and bacterial contribution to soil respiration (Anderson and Domsch 1973). The main difficulties obtained by using antibiotics are that inhibitors are often inactivated by soil or degraded by the soil microbes. However, the specificity of the antibiotics used was tested by previous study using mixed bacterial and fungal communities (Anderson and Domsch 1973). The results have suggested that antibiotics can be used as a tool to determine the fungal and bacterial contributions to soil respiration. The antibiotics method could be safely and considerably shortened by elimination of the tests for antibiotics selectivity. In this study, hypothesis from degradation of the antibiotics could also be eliminated as the antibiotics experiment is kept short (within 8 h) (Anderson and Domsch 1973).
In the last decade, a large number of studies have distinguished fungal contribution to soil N2O flux by using the antibiotics method (Laughlin and Stevens 2002; Yanai et al. 2007; Wei et al. 2014; Jirout 2015;) and the only caution they focused on was to determine the minimum antibiotics concentrations using SIR inhibition method as previous described (Anderson and Domsch 1973). The experiments necessary for the antibiotics as the previous study (Anderson and Domsch 1973) mentioned were the establishment of the concentration of antibiotics and quantification of fungal and bacterial contribution to soil respiration which has been described in this study. Our results suggested that minimum concentrations of detected antibiotics were streptomycin at 6.0 mg g−1 dry soil and cycloheximide at 10.0 mg g−1 dry soil, respectively. Below or above these concentrations, the IAR value was greater or less than 1.0, suggesting noticeable overlapping inhibitory effects. Regardless of this uncertainty, the relative fungal contribution to N2O flux in this tea soil using inhibitors method should be a valuable result.
4.4 Methodological considerations
While bacterial denitrifiers are able to promote the reduction of N2O, fungi cannot reduce N2O to N2 owing to the absence of N2O reductase. Therefore, wide concerns about reliable determination of soil N2O from fungi and bacteria were raised due to this physiological difference (Chen et al. 2014). In experiments with inoculated Penicillium strain into sterile or nonsterile nitrate-treated soils, N2O production by fungi could be overestimated in sterile soils compared to that in nonsterile soils. On the other hand, glucose addition increased the electron donor and therefore bacterial N2O reduction could also be enhanced. The underestimation of bacterial contribution to N2O might be made more severe by substrate addition. Despite these uncertainties, the comparison between soils inoculated with Penicillium strain should be a valid result, representing the greater fungal contribution to N2O production in this acidic tea orchard soil.
4.5 Conclusions
The present study supplies more particular evaluation of soil fungal contributions to N2O emission than previous studies. We showed greater fungal domination in producing N2O in an acidic tea soil via using selective antibiotic inhibition method. Meanwhile, two fungal strains were identified and Penicillium strain was demonstrated to have a strong N2O-producing ability. In addition, the inoculation of Penicillium strain into sterile or nonsterile soils suggested a significant contribution of fungal denitrification to N2O production in the tea soil. Results obtained from this study suggest that fungal denitrification was unneglectable in N2O production of acid tea soil. Further studies are needed to confirm the relationship between the fungal N2O production and the N2O emissions at the field site and to explore the implication of shifts in AOA and AOB communities due to the fires for N management in forest ecosystems.
References
Akiyama H, Yan XY, Yagi K (2006) Estimations of emission factors for fertilizer-induced direct N2O emissions from agricultural soils in Japan: summary of available data. Soil Sci Plant Nutr 52:774–787
Anderson JPE, Domsch KH (1973) Quantification of bacterial and fungal contributions of soil respiration. Arch Microbiol 93:113–127
Baggs EM, Smales CL, Bateman EJ (2010) Changing pH shifts the microbial source as well as the magnitude of N2O emission from soil. Biol Fertil Soils 46:793–805
Bateman EJ, Baggs EM (2005) Contributions of nitrification and denitrification to N2O emissions from soils at different water-filled pore space. Biol Fertil Soils 41:379–388
Barton L, Murphy DV, Butterbach-Bahl K (2013) Influence of crop rotation and liming on greenhouse gas emissions from a semi-arid soil. Agric Ecosyst Environ 167:23–32
BeareMH NCL, Coleman DC et al (1990) A substrate-inducedrespiration (SIR) method for measurement of fungal and bacterial biomass onplant residues. Soil Biol Biochem 22:585–594
Chen HH, Mothapo NV, Shi W (2014) The significant contribution of fungi to soil N2O production across diverse ecosystems. Appl Soil Ecol 7:70–77
Chen HH, Mothapo NV, Shi W (2015a) Fungal and bacterial N2O production regulated by soil amendments of simple and complex substrates. Soil Biol Biochem 84:116–126
Chen HH, Mothapo NV, Shi W (2015b) Soil moisture and pH control relative contribution of fungi and bacteria to N2O production. Microb Ecol 69:180–191
FAO (2014) The state of food and agriculture. FAO, Rome
Fierer N, Jackson RB (2006) The diversity and biogeography of soil bacterial communities. PNAS 103:626–631
Hall TA (1999) BioEdit: a user-friendly biological sequence alignment editor and analysis program for Windows 95/98/NT. Nucleic Acids Symp Ser 41:95–98
Hefting MM, Bobbink R, De CH (2003) Nitrous oxide emission and denitrification in chronically nitrate-loaded riparian buffer zones. J Environ Qual 32:1194–1203
Herold MB, Baggs EM, Daniell TJ (2012) Fungal and bacterial denitrification are differently affected by long-term pH amendment and cultivation of arable soil. Soil Biol Biochem 54:25–35
Hu HW, Zhang LM, Dai Y et al (2013) pH-dependent distribution of soil ammonia oxidizers across a large geographical scale as revealed by high-throughput pyrosequencing. J Soils Sediments 13:1439–1449
Huang Y, Li YY, Yao HY (2014) Nitrate enhances N2O emission more than ammonium in a highly acidic soil. J Soils Sediments 14:146–154
Huang Y, Long XE, Chapman SJ et al (2015) Acidophilic denitrifiers dominate the N2O production in a 100-year-old tea orchard soil. Environ Sci Pollut R 22:4173–4182
Jirout J (2015) Nitrous oxide productivity of soil fungi along a gradient of cattle impact. Fungal Ecol 17:155–163
Klemedtsson L, Enfors M, Björk RG et al (2010) Reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by wood ash application to a Picea abies (L.) Karst forest on a drained organic soil. Eur J Soil Sci 61:734–744
Laughlin RJ, Rütting T, Müller C et al (2009) Effect of acetate on soil respiration N2O emissions and gross N transformations related to fungi and bacteria in a grassland soil. Appl Soil Ecol 42:25–30
Laughlin J, Stevens RJ (2002) Evidence for fungal dominance of denitrification and codenitrification in a grassland soil. Soil Sci Soc Am J 66:1540–1548
Lavrent’ev RB, Zaitsev SA, Sudnitsyn II et al (2008) Nitrous oxide production by fungi in soils under different moisture levels. Moscow Univ Soil Sci Bull 63:178–183
Ma WK, Farrell RE, Siciliano SD (2008) Soil formate regulates the fungal nitrous oxide emission pathway. Appl Environ Microb 74:6690–6696
Martin KJ, Rygiewicz PT (2005) Fungal-specific PCR primers developed for analysis of the ITS region of environmental DNA extracts. BMC Microbiol. doi:10.1186/1471-2180-5-28
Molstad L, Dorsch P, Bakken LR (2007) Robotized incubation system for monitoring gases (O2, NO, N2O, N2) in denitrifying cultures. J Microbiol Methods 71:202–211
Mothapo NV, Chen HH, Cubeta MA et al (2013) Nitrous oxide producing activity of diverse fungi from distinct agroecosystems. Soil Biol Biochem 66:94–101
Rousk J, Baath E, Brookes PC et al (2010) Soil bacterial and fungal communities across a pH gradient in an arable soil. ISME J 4:1340–1351
Rütting T, Huygens D, Boecks P et al (2013) Increased fungal dominance in N2O emission hotspots along a natural pH gradient in organic forest soil. Biol Fert Soils 49:715–721
Seo DC, Delaune RD (2010) Fungal and bacterial mediated denitrification in wetlands: influence of sediment redox condition. Water Res 44:2441–2450
Smith KA, Conen F (2004) Impacts of land management on fluxes of trace green-house gases. Soil Use Manage 20:255–263
Strickland MS, Rousk J (2010) Considering fungal:bacterial dominance in soils—methods, controls, and ecosystem implications. Soil Biol Biochem 42:1385–1395
Takaya N, Catalan-Sakairi MAB, Sakaguchi Y et al (2003) Aerobic denitrifying bacteria that produce low levels of nitrous oxide. Appl Environ Microbiol 69:3152–3157
Tokuda S, Hayatsu M (2000) Nitrous oxide production from strongly acid tea field soil. Soil Sci Plant Nutr 46:835–844
Tokuda S, Hayatsu M (2004) Nitrous oxide flux from a tea field amended with a large amount of nitrogen fertilizer and soil environmental factors controlling the flux. Soil Sci Plant Nutr 50:365–374
Van Den Heuvel RN, Bakker S, Jetten MSM et al (2011) Decreased N2O reduction by low soil pH causes high N2O emissions in a riparian ecosystem. Geobiology 9:294–300
Wei W, Isobe K, Shiratori Y et al (2014) N2O emission from cropland field soil through fungal denitrification after surface applications of organic fertilizer. Soil Biol Biochem 69:157–167
Xue D, Huang XD, Yao HY et al (2010) Effect of lime application on microbial community in acidic tea orchard soils in comparison with those in wasteland and forest soils. J Environ Sci 22:1253–1260
Yanai Y, Toyota K, Morishita T et al (2007) Fungal N2O production in an arable peat soil in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia. Soil Sci Plant Nutr 53:806–811
Zhou Z, Takaya N, Sakairi MA, Shoun H (2001) Oxygen requirement for denitrification by the fungus Fusarium oxysporum. Arch Microbiol 175:19–25
Zumft WG (1997) Cell biology and molecular basis of denitrification. Microbiol Mol Biol R 61:533–616
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 41501333). We thank Professor Huaiying Yao from Ningbo Urban Environment Observation and Research Station for providing equipment for antibiotic and culture-dependent analyses.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Additional information
Responsible editor: Zucong Cai
Electronic supplementary material
ESM 1
(DOCX 182 kb)
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Huang, Y., Xiao, X. & Long, X. Fungal denitrification contributes significantly to N2O production in a highly acidic tea soil. J Soils Sediments 17, 1599–1606 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11368-017-1655-y
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11368-017-1655-y