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Environmental Processes
Atmospheric CO2 enrichment and reactive nitrogen inputs interactively stimulate soil cation losses and acidification Li Zhang, Yunpeng Qiu, Lei Cheng, Yi Wang, Lingli Liu, Cong Tu, Dan C. Bowman, Kent O. Burkey, Xinmin Bian, Weijian Zhang, and Shuijin Hu Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b00495 • Publication Date (Web): 17 May 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 17, 2018
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Environmental Science & Technology
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Atmospheric CO2 enrichment and reactive nitrogen inputs interactively stimulate soil
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cation losses and acidification†
3 4
Li Zhang&+//, Yunpeng Qiu&+⊥, Lei Cheng$, Yi Wang#, Lingli Liu%, Cong Tu∇, Dan C. Bowman§,
5
Kent O. Burkey§||, Xinmin Bian//, Weijian Zhang//, and Shuijin Hu*+⊥
6 7
+
8
27695, USA
9
//
Department of Entomology & Plant Pathology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC
Institute of Applied Ecology, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China
10
⊥ College
11
210095, China
12
$
College of Life Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China
13
#
State Key Laboratory of Loess and Quaternary Geology, Institute of Earth Environment,
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Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xi'an, 710061, China
15
%
16
Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100093, China
17
∇ Department
18
Raleigh, NC 27695, USA,
19
§
20
USA,
21
||
22
Research Unit, Raleigh, NC 27607, USA
of Resources and Environmental Sciences, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing
State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change, Institute of Botany, Chinese
of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, North Carolina State University,
Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695,
United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Plant Science
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†
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execution of the field experiment.
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&
This paper is dedicated to Dr. Fitzgerald L. Booker for his contribution to the design and
These authors contributed equally.
27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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ABSTRACT
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Reactive N inputs (Nr) may alleviate N-limitation of plant growth and are assumed to help
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sustain plant responses to the rising atmospheric CO2 (eCO2). However, Nr and eCO2 may elicit
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a cascade reaction that alters soil chemistry and nutrient availability, shifting the limiting factors
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of plant growth, particularly in acidic tropical and subtropical croplands with low organic matter
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and low nutrient cations. Yet, few have so far examined the interactive effects of Nr and eCO2 on
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the dynamics of soil cation nutrients and soil acidity. We investigated the cation dynamics in the
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plant-soil system with exposure to eCO2 and different N sources in a subtropical, acidic
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agricultural soil. eCO2 and Nr, alone and interactively, increased Ca2+ and Mg2+ in soil solutions
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or leachates in aerobic agroecosystems. eCO2 significantly reduced soil pH, and NH4+-N inputs
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amplified this effect, suggesting that eCO2-induced plant preference of NH4+-N and plant growth
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may facilitate soil acidification. This is, to our knowledge, the first direct demonstration of eCO2
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enhancement of soil acidity, although other studies have previously shown that eCO2 can
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increase cation release into soil solutions. Together, these findings provide new insights into the
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dynamics of cation nutrients and soil acidity under future climatic scenarios, highlighting the
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urgency for more studies on plant-soil responses to climate change in acidic tropical and
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subtropical ecosystems.
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TOC/Abstract art
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INTRODUCTION
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Rising reactive N inputs (Nr) and atmospheric CO2 concentrations (eCO2) are two concurrent
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factors that are believed to sustain the productivity of terrestrial ecosystems and promote
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ecosystem C sequestration.1-3 This assumption, however, has not taken the potential negative
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effects of Nr and eCO2 into consideration. Simultaneously, ozone in the troposphere is a dynamic,
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short-lived air pollutant and is toxic to plant.4,5 Its concentration has more than doubled since
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1800.6 Elevated O3 (eO3) generally suppresses photosynthesis and reduces plant growth and
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subsequent C allocation belowground.7,8 Climate change (particularly eCO2) has elicited some
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fundamental changes in ocean biogeochemistry, resulting in globally ocean acidification with
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consequent impacts on both ocean life and marine resources.9-11 eCO2 and Nr may alter soil
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chemical properties and the relative availability of soil nutrients, shifting the limiting factors of
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ecosystem productivity. In particular, high Nr often cause cation losses and soil acidification.12-14
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Also, sporadic evidence suggests that eCO2 may enhance cation release from soil through
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stimulating carbonic acid formation, cation solubility, and weathering15,16 and cation losses
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through biomass removal and/or leaching.17,18 Yet, few have so far assessed the interactive
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effects of Nr and eCO2 on soil nutrient cations and soil acidity, especially in the humid
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subtropics and tropics where soil cations are low.19
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Soils in the warm and humid regions are generally acidic and infertile. The widespread
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existence of cation- and phosphorus-deficiency, Al toxicity and low available N co-limit their
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productivity.13,20 A soil pH of 5.0 appears to be a critical threshold value for many crop plants as
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Al toxicity intensifies below this value.21,22 Chemical N fertilizers are the major N source for
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many agricultural plants and are the primary agent of soil acidification in agroecosystems.23 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Fertilizer N usually enters the soil in the form of ammonium (NH4+) and nitrifying microbes
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rapidly convert NH4+ into NO3- (i.e., nitrification), generating proton ions (H+) and further
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facilitating soil acidification24,25. Also, eCO2 in general stimulates plant growth and
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photosynthate allocation belowground and enhances soil root and microbial activities.26,27
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Increased CO2 production due to higher biological activities generate soil H2CO3 that possesses
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soil acidifying potential28 and may stimulate cation release from soil. However, this effect has
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largely documented in anaerobic environments such as deep soils16,29 or rice paddies18 but not in
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the aerobic soils. Also, CO2-induced cation losses are cumulative and are irreversible. Despite
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the tight coupling between C and N cycles, few have ascertained how N fertilization and
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atmospheric CO2 enrichment may jointly affect soil chemistry and the dynamics of soil nutrient
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cations under future climate scenarios.19
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We conducted two independent but complementary experiments to investigate how eCO2
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and Nr interactively affect soil cation dynamics and soil acidity in surface soils of aerobic
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agroecosystems. In contrast, eO3 usually reduces plant growth5,8 and likely reduces root and
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microbial activities,7 and we therefore used it as a negative control. We hypothesized that (i)
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eCO2 and Nr interactively stimulate cation release from soil, plant cation uptake and cation
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leaching, facilitating soil acidification; (ii) eCO2-induced plant preference of NH4+-N may
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function as a primary driver of soil acidification.
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MATERIAL AND METHODS
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The field experiment
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This experiment was conducted in conjunction with a long-term CO2 and O3 study at the Lake
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Wheeler farm of North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA (35°43'N, 78°40'W;
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elevation 120 m). Annual mean temperature and precipitation are 15.2°C and 1050 mm,
137
respectively. The soil is an Appling sandy loam (fine, kaolinitic, thermic Typic Kanhapludult),
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well drained with a pH(H2O) of 5.5, and contained 9.0 g C and 0.86 g N kg-1 soil when the
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experiment was initiated (May 2005).
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This experiment was conducted on a soybean-wheat system, using open-top chambers
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(OTC, 3.0 m diameter × 2.4 m tall; SI Figure S1).27 The experiment was a 2 × 2 factorial design
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with four treatments randomly assigned into each of four blocks. Four different trace-gas
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treatments were: (a) control, ambient CO2 in charcoal-filtered (CF) air; (b) eO3, CF air plus 1.4
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times ambient O3, (c) eCO2, CF air plus 180 µmol mol-1 CO2, and (d) eCO2 and eO3, CF air with
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1.4 times ambient O3 and 180 µmol mol-1 CO2. The 12-h daily (08:00-20:00 h) averaged CO2
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concentrations were 380 and 560 µmol mol-1 CO2 for ambient (a and b) and elevated (c and d)
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CO2 treatments, respectively. The daily averaged O3 concentrations for ambient (a and c) and
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elevated (b and d) O3 treatments were 21 and 59 nl l-1 O3, separately. Carbon dioxide was
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dispensed from a 14-ton liquid receiver 24 h daily and monitored at canopy height with an
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infrared CO2 analyzer (model 6252, LiCor Inc., Lincoln, NE, USA). Ozone was generated by
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electrostatic discharge in dry O2 (model GTC-1A, Ozonia North America, Elmwood Park, NJ,
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USA) and dispensed 12 h daily (08:00-20:00 h) in proportion to ambient O3 concentrations. It
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was monitored at canopy height using a UV photometric O3 analyzer (model 49, Thermo
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Environmental Instruments Co., Franklin, MA, USA).
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Soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] was planted each spring followed by winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in the fall using no-till practices. Plants were exposed to reciprocal 7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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combinations of CO2 and O3 within cylindrical OTCs from emergence to physiological maturity.
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N fertilizers of NH4NO3 were applied to wheat plants at a rate of 120 kg N ha-1 (24 and 96 kg N
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ha-1 at planting and in early March, respectively) and no additional N fertilizers were added to
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soybean plants. Dolomitic limestone was applied annually at a rate of 500 g per chamber
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(equivalent to 708 kg ha-1) in late October immediately before wheat planting according to soil
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test recommendations.
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Lysimeters and PRS probes
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Lysimeters (SoilMoisture, Inc., Santa Barbara, CA, USA) were installed at 20 cm soil depth in
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2007 at each chamber to examine cation nutrients in soil solutions.30 Soil solution samples were
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collected in response to a vacuum of 0.06mPa every two weeks using acid-washed vials and
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frozen at -20 °C. The cations in soil solutions from the lysimeters were determined with an ICP-
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Optical Emission Spectrometer (Perkin Elmer Co., Norwalk, CT, USA).
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Soil nutrient availability responses to plant-mediated effects of eCO2 and eO3 were
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measured using ion-exchange resins (Plant Root Simulator (PRS) probes, Western Ag
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Innovations Inc., Saskatoon, Saskatchewan) by the method described by Bengtson et al. (2007).31
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(PRS) probes were installed in the rooting zone (0-5cm depth) during late reproductive phase
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(November 2008) and mid-vegetative phase (July 2009) of the soybean rotation and during mid-
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vegetative growth of the wheat rotation (March 2009). For each burial period, three (PRS) probes
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for measuring soil available anions and three probes for measuring soil available cations were
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incubated in each chamber for two weeks. At the end of the burial period, the probes were
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removed and thoroughly washed with deionized water. Afterward, the cleaned (PRS) probes
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were sent to the Western Ag Innovations Inc. laboratory in Saskatoon, where they were analyzed
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for NH4+, NO3-, Ca2+, Mg2+, K+, Al3+, Fe2+, H2PO4-, and Mn2+. 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Cation nutrients in plant biomass
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Aboveground plant biomass and plant biomass Ca and Mg were quantified at the final plant
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harvest each year (except 2006). All aboveground plant biomass was harvested from each
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chamber. Soybean plants were separated into leaves, stems and seeds, while wheat plants were
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divided into straw and seeds. Plant materials were oven-dried at 65°C and weighed. Seed and
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residue subsamples were cut into pieces and ground into fine powder using an 8000-D Mixer
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Mill (SPEX CertiPrep Inc., Metuchen, NJ, USA) and prepared through dry ashing on a high
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temperature muffle furnace (500 °C). After the samples cooled down, 2 mL distilled water was
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added along with 4 ml of 6N hydrochloric acid. The solution was then warmed slightly (to ca.
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50 °C) on a steam plate and transferred into a 50 ml volumetric flask with distilled water. After
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that, the solution was mixed and filtered. The Ca, Mg and K concentrations of plant components
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were then analyzed on an ICP-Optical Emission Spectrometer (Perkin Elmer Co., Norwalk, CT,
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USA).32
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Soil pH
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Soil pH values were measured with an electrode and HI 9026 meter (Hanna Instruments,
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Woonsocket, RI, USA) using a soil/deionized water suspension of 1:2.5 (weight: volume).
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The microcosm experiment
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This microcosm experiment was conducted in the CO2 exposure facility at the USDA Air-
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Quality greenhouse at North Carolina State University (SI Figure S2). The facility consisted of
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20 continuously stirred tank reactor (CSTR) chambers designed for the exposure of plants to CO2
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and O3 gases.27, 33 For those chambers (1.2 m diameter × 1.4 m tall) assigned to an eCO2
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treatment, compressed CO2 was added to the air entering the CSTR using a rotometer to control 9 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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flow so that CO2 concentration was maintained at target level. The air continuously moved out
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the CSTR and thus minimized the heating effect of chambers. To monitor CO2 concentrations, an
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infrared analyzer (model 6252, LiCor Inc., Lincoln, NE, USA) was used to measure CSTR
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chamber air CO2 concentrations, with a computer collecting and averaging CO2 and temperature
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data for analysis.
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This microcosm experiment was initiated to assess the interactive effects of eCO2 and the
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species and quantities of N inputs on soil acidity and soil nutrient cations. This was a split-split-
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plot experiment with whole-plots randomly assigned into each of four blocks. The whole-plot
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treatments were two atmospheric CO2 levels (ambient at 400 p.p.m.v. vs. elevated at 580
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p.p.m.v.) with four replicates (that is, four CSTR chambers for each CO2 level). The split-factors
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factors were two N species (NH4+-N vs. NO3--N) and the split-split-plot factors were two N
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levels (low at 62.5 vs. high at 125 kg N ha-1). While the high N level approximately corresponds
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to current N inputs in North Carolina, the low level intends to mimic N supplies in developing
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countries across the acidic soil regions in the future decades.34,35
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Mini-lysimeters
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We used mini-lysimeters (SI Figure S3),36 which were constructed from polyvinyl chloride
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columns (15 cm in diameter and 30 cm deep) with a cap at the bottom, to manipulate soil
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nutrient cation leaching. Each column was installed with one mini-lysimeter, which was
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equipped with two ceramic cups (2.2 cm diameter × 7.0 cm long) (SoilMoisture Inc., Santa
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Barbara, CA, USA) being embedded in 3-cm diatomaceous earth (Rising Sun Pools Inc., Raleigh,
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NC, USA), layered at the bottom of the column. The ceramic cups were connected with a ‘Y-
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Type’ connector (Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., USA) in situ via tubing to a 250-mL collection
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bottle, which was connected to a manifold vacuum line and pump equipped with a pressure 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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gauge. The soil was collected from the ‘field OTC study’ site in October 2012. The field soil
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was a low fertility sandy loam (fine, kaolinitic, thermic Typic Kanhapludult) with pH(H2O) of 5.2.
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Amount of 2.4 g dolomitic limestone (sieved through 2mm) (Winston Weaver Inc., Winston
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Salem, NC, USA) was mixed into 2.4 kg of soil (dry soil equivalent) to each microcosm to
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ensure healthy growth of wheat plants. Water was added to let the diatomaceous earth stabilize
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for 2 days, then the mixed soil was added on to the stabilized diatomaceous earth. The mixed soil
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was watered to 15% (w/w; ca. 75% WFC) and stabilized for 30 days. Five subsamples were
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obtained for determination of soil pH, and the averaged pH(H2O) was 5.6 at initiation of the
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experiment.
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Seed planting
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Ten seeds of winter wheat were sown into each column and thinned after emergence so that each
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column had six healthy plants. The CO2 fumigation started one week later after seed sowing. At
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the 4th week after seedling emergence, 50 ml of nutrient solution containing 32 mg N kg-1 soil of
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(NH4)2SO4 or KNO3 and 10 mg P kg-1 soil of NaH2PO4 was applied to the high-level N
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treatments, while half volume of the N nutrient solution and 10 mg P kg-1 soil of NaH2PO4 was
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applied to the low-level N treatments. During the growing season, nutrient solutions containing
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16 mg N kg-1 soil of (NH4)2SO4 or KNO3 (high N treatment) or half volume (low N treatment)
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and 5 mg P kg-1 soil of NaH2PO4 were added to the columns at the 8th, 10th and 12th week after
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seedling emergence. Equivalent K2SO4 was applied to balance K+. Columns were watered with
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deionized water daily.
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Soil nutrient leachates
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During the growing season, a vacuum of 0.010 MPa was connected to the ceramic cups for 30
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min to promote complete drainage into collection bottles after watering. Soil nutrient leachates
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were collected from the collection bottles using acid-washed vials and stored at 4°C. Leachate
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samples were collected two weeks after each N fertilization and 1d before plant harvest, and
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were subsampled and analyzed for NH4+-N, NO3--N, Ca2+, Mg2+ and Al3+ concentrations. The
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concentrations of Ca2+ and Mg2+ were analyzed using an ICP-Optical Emission Spectrometer
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(Perkin Elmer Co., Norwalk, CT, USA). NH4+- and NO3--N were measured using a Lachat
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QC8000 Flow Injection Analyzer. Total leaching losses of NH4+-N, NO3--N, Ca2+ and Mg2+ were
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calculated with leachate volume and cation concentrations. Cumulative NH4+-N, NO3--N, Ca2+,
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Mg2+ and Al3+ referred to the sum of NH4+-N, NO3--N, Ca2+, Mg2+ and Al3+ contents in soil
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solutions, respectively.
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Plant biomass and cation uptake
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At the plant physiological maturity, all aboveground plant parts were harvested at the soil surface
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and carefully separated into seeds and residue components (stems and leaves). Roots were
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carefully separated from the soil and washed thoroughly with tap water. Seed, residue and root
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weights were determined after being oven dried at 65°C for 48 hours. Subsamples of seeds and
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residues were ground into fine powder using an 8000-D Mixer Mill (SPEX CertiPrep Inc.,
265
Metuchen, NJ, USA) and prepared using dry ashing procedure by a high temperature muffle
266
furnace (500 °C). The Ca and Mg concentrations of plant components were analyzed on an ICP-
267
Optical Emission Spectrometer (Perkin Elmer Co., Norwalk, CT, USA).
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Soil pH
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Soils were collected immediately after moving aboveground plant parts and separated from
270
diatomaceous earth. Soil pH values were measured with an electrode and HI 9026 meter (Hanna 12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Instruments, Woonsocket, RI, USA) using a soil/deionized water suspension of 1:2.5 (weight:
272
volume).
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Statistical analysis
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For the field experiment, the effects of eCO2 on the response variables (soil cations and pH, plant
276
biomass and plant biomass Ca and Mg) for the entire period from 2005 to 2009 were valued
277
using the repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA). For the microcosm study, the
278
effects and interactions of eCO2 and Nr on soil and plant parameters (soil pH, plant biomass, and
279
plant biomass Ca and Mg) were analyzed using a split-split plot model. Repeated-measures
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ANOVA was performed to examine the effects of eCO2 and Nr on the leaching dynamics of soil
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solution chemistry. All statistical analyses were performed using the SAS 9.3 (SAS Institute, Inc.,
282
Cary, NC, USA). For all tests, P< 0.05 was considered to indicate a statistically significant
283
difference.
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RESULTS
286 287
The impact of eCO2 on plant biomass and cation nutrients in plant biomass and soil
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solutions in the field experiment
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Elevated CO2 on average increased soybean biomass by 33.4%, increasing biomass Ca and Mg
290
by 36.9% and 28.9%, respectively (SI Table S4 and S6). It also increased aboveground wheat
291
biomass by 16.3% (P < 0.05) but did not significantly affect biomass Ca and Mg (SI Table S5
292
and S6).
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eCO2 significantly and consistently increased Ca2+ and Mg2+ in soil solutions (Figure 1)
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Similarly, eCO2 increased Fe2+ and Mn2+ in solutions though statistically significant only for
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Mn2+ in 2009 (SI TableS2 and S3). In contrast, eCO2 significantly reduced K+ concentration
296
under soybean (November 2008 and July 2009; SI Table S1 and S3) but increased it under wheat
297
(March 2009; SI Table S2). In addition, eCO2 did not affect soil pH and Al3+ in soil solutions
298
(Figure 2a, SI Table S1, S2 and S3) and neither eO3 nor eCO2 × eO3 had a significant effect on
299
Ca2+, Mg2+ and Al3+ in soil solutions (Figure 1, SI Table S1, S2 and S3).
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Interactive effects of eCO2, N species and N level on cation nutrients in soil leachates and
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plant biomass in the microcosm experiment
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Both CO2 concentrations and N inputs affected Ca2+ and Mg2+ in soil leachates and plant
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biomass. Across all the 5 sampling dates, eCO2 alone increased Ca2+ and Mg2+ in soil leachates
305
by 132% and 95%, respectively, and eCO2 and reactive N had significant interactive effects on
306
Ca2+ and Mg2+ in soil leachates (Figure 3 and SI Table S7). Also, eCO2 effect on Ca2+ and Mg2+
307
was only significant when NH4+-N was applied (Figure 3). However, eCO2 did not significantly
308
affect plant biomass Ca (P = 0.89) and Mg (P = 0.09) at the final harvest (SI Figure S4 and Table
309
S7). N species significantly affected plant biomass, Ca2+ and Mg2+ in soil leachates and plant
310
biomass Mg (SI Figure S4, S5 and Table S7). Total biomass was 12.9% higher under NH4+-N
311
than NO3--N (SI Figure S5). Soil leachate Ca2+ and Mg2+ was almost 4 times and 7 times higher
312
with NH4+-N than NO3--N inputs, respectively (P < 0.01; Figure 3), suggesting that proton
313
produced by nitrification may play a dominant role in promoting cation release from soil. High N
314
inputs increased plant biomass by 44.7% (SI Figure S5), and biomass Ca and Mg by 42.0% and
315
33%, respectively (SI Figure S4). Also, Al concentration in the soil leachates was significantly 14 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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higher under NH4+-N than NO3--N input (SI Figure S6). However, no significant CO2 or CO2 × N
317
effects were observed. The Ca2+ and Mg2+ dynamics exhibited a very similar pattern under two N
318
levels (Figure 3), and plant uptake was higher with high than low N inputs (SI Figure S4). In
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addition, NH4+- and NO3--N concentrations in the leachates were close to detection limits and
320
exhibited no differences among the treatments (data not shown).
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As expected, the species and quantity of N inputs differently affected soil pH: soil pH
322
remained statistically unchanged at 5.64 with NO3--N inputs but significantly reduced to 5.20
323
with NH4+-N inputs (Figure 2b). However, the significant effect of eCO2 on soil pH was
324
surprising (Figure 2b). Averaged across different N treatments, eCO2 induced a small, but
325
significant decrease in soil pH (by 0.18 units; P < 0.01; Figure 2b and SI Table S7). eCO2
326
significantly interacted with NH4+-N in reducing soil pH, leading to different soil pH responses
327
under two NH4+-N levels. In contrast, it did not interact with NO3--N as eCO2 reduced soil pH by
328
about 0.22 units at both NO3--N levels (Figure 2b).
329 330
DISCUSSION
331 332
Rising atmospheric CO2 (eCO2) and reactive N inputs (Nr) may alter cation dynamics and
333
enhance soil acidity through different mechanisms and/or processes. We proposed a unifying
334
framework of eCO2 and Nr interactive effects on soil cation losses and acidity. While Nr
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primarily modify microbial processes that generate protons via nitrification to alter the dynamics
336
of cations, eCO2 increases protons largely through plant-mediated processes (Figure 4). Two N
337
species also have profound differences in their impacts on proton production and soil pH. NH4+-
338
N inputs can potentially enhance proton production through three pathways: microbial H+ 15 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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production during nitrification,13 plant H+ excretion to maintain cation-anion balance in response
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to plant NH4+ uptake,37 and increased plant growth and the resulting root and microbial activities
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(Figure 4 and SI Figure S5).38 eCO2 may enhance soluble cations in soil solutions through H+
342
replacement of Ca2+ and Mg2+ from exchange sites over the short term18 and weathering over the
343
long-term.16 Significant interactive effects on soil pH between eCO2 and NH4+-N inputs (Figure
344
2b) suggest that plant H+ excretion following CO2-enhancement of NH4+ uptake may play a
345
major role in shaping long-term impacts of eCO2 on soil cations and soil acidity. In contrast, the
346
possible pathway through which NO3- may stimulate H+ generation is through enhancing plant
347
growth and root activity. Despite increasing plant biomass by 46.8% (SI Figure S5), high NO3--N
348
inputs did not affect soil pH (Figure 2b), suggesting that plant excretion of hydroxyl ions (OH-)
349
to maintain cation-anion balance may have partially offset H+ generation of a larger plant root
350
system. The effects of Nr on soil acidity may be further amplified under eCO2 at least through
351
two mechanisms. First, eCO2 increases CO2 availability for plants and thus reduces stomatal
352
conductance and leaf transpiration,39,40 reducing plant NO3- uptake because NO3- reaches to roots
353
mainly through mass flow.41 Also, eCO2 reduces plant photorespiration that produces
354
intermediates needed for plant nitrate assimilation.42, 43 Consequently, plants have to increase
355
NH4+ uptake to meet plant C intake, further enhancing H+ release. Second, CO2-enhancement of
356
plant water use efficiency improves soil water availability44 and likely increases leaching of soil
357
cations and NO3-, facilitating acidification.
358
CO2-enhancement of cations in soil solutions has previously been demonstrated.29,45
359
eCO2 often stimulates carbonic acid formation, cation solubility, and weathering, potentially
360
enhancing soil cation availability.16,18 Yet, our results provide the first direct evidence showing
361
that eCO2 promotes soil acidity in upland surface soils. Soil acidification is a worldwide 16 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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phenomenon and has been largely attributed to acid rain and reactive N inputs.46 Yet, significant
363
acidification has occurred in recent decades in remote areas such as Inner Mongolia where acid
364
deposition was relatively low.47 Our results suggest that the rising atmospheric CO2 might have
365
contributed to this process through stimulating plant growth and H+ release from plants.19,48,49
366
The lysimeter system employed in our experiment optimizes the leaching of cations from soil
367
and may overestimate the short-term impact. Yet, CO2-enhancement of cations in soil solutions
368
has been shown in the deep soils of a subtropical forest,16 which may facilitate cation losses in
369
tropical and subtropical regions where nitrogen input (either deposition or fertilization) is high.
370
In a previous microcosm study where leaching was minimized, no significant CO2 effects on soil
371
pH were observed,19 suggesting that losses of cations and NO3- were the key leading to soil
372
acidification. Also, the N input rate (at 62.5 kg N ha-1) used in our microcosm experiment was at
373
the low end for agricultural soils and is likely to increase in many tropical and subtropical
374
regions.50 More importantly, the effect on cation losses and acidity accumulates over time. It
375
magnifies over the long term as stimulated assimilation of cations including Ca2+, Mg2+, and
376
NH4+ by plant biomass under eCO2 increases the removal of base cations due to crop harvest.51
377
Taken together, these results may permit valid inferences about the interactive effects of eCO2
378
and Nr on soil acidity over time.
379
Our results may have some major implications for the N management. Marked soil pH
380
decrease under high NH4+-N inputs and eCO2 (Figure 2b) is particularly alarming because Al
381
toxicity can quickly increase when soil pH decreases below 5.0.13,21,22 Higher Al concentrations
382
under these treatments (Figure S6) provided direct evidence of increased Al solubility. The
383
buffering mechanisms for soil pH differ at different soil pH: when soil pH is above 5.0, soils are
384
buffered by base cations; when soil pH falls below 4.5, soils are buffered by Al3+ and cations 17 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
385
play a minor role as they are mostly depleted.13, 24 In acidic soils with a pH less than 5.0, Al3+ is
386
solubilized into soil solution and leads to the displacement of other cations, resulting in decreases
387
in the storage and availability of base cations.52 Consequently, high Al3+, in combination with
388
base cation deficiency, negatively affect root growth and function, leading to a decrease in
389
nutrient uptake and crop health and production.52,53 Therefore, maintaining soil pH above 5.0 is
390
critically important for crop production and cations play a major role around the pH level.
391
Agricultural soils in the humid subtropics and tropics (Oxisols in South America and Africa or
392
Ultisols in Southeast Asia and Southeast US) (USDA–NRCS 2005) have low soil pH and cation
393
contents, and are likely most vulnerable to cation losses. Much of our knowledge on N dynamics
394
and eCO2 effect is from the temperate world,13,50 preventing any generalization about the tropics
395
and/or other areas where the most dramatic increases in Nr will occur over the next few
396
decades.54-56 Our results suggest that high N inputs under a rising CO2 climate may exacerbate
397
chemical constraints on crop productivity in acidic soils, raising new challenges for food
398
production and quality.57 Also, liming is the most effective approach amending soil acidity for
399
agricultural soils.25 However, because lime materials are often physically unavailable and/or
400
financially too costly, farmers have few other options to amend soil acidity, highlighting the
401
urgency to identify the alternative N management regimes that are practically feasible and are
402
conducive to sustaining the productivity.
403 404
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
405 406
Supporting Information
407
The following Supporting Information is available for this article: 18 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Page 19 of 31
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Six figures and seven tables.
409 410
AUTHOR INFORMATION
411 412
Corresponding Author
413
*Phone: 1-919-515-2097; e-mail:
[email protected] 414
Author Contributions
415
The manuscript was written through contributions of all authors. All authors have given approval
416
to the final version of the manuscript. &These authors contributed equally.
417
Notes
418
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
419 420
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
421 422
We thank D. Coleman and Y. Luo for valuable comments, and J. Barton, W. Pursley, J. Wang, Y.
423
Zhang, and E. Silva for technical assistance. L.Z., Y.W. and Y.Q were primarily supported by
424
fellowships from China Scholarship Council. The field experiment was primarily supported by
425
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)–Agricultural Research Service Plant Science Research
426
Unit (Raleigh, NC) and the microcosm experiment was supported in part by CALS, NCSU and a
427
USDA grant to S.H. (2009-35101-05351).
428 429
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FIGURES
16
(a)
12
Ca 2+
Ca 2+ (mg L -1 )
14
10 8 6
(mg 10 cm -2 2 weeks-1 )
613
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1000
4
800 600 400 200
(b)
6
4
(mg 10 cm -2 2 weeks-1 )
0
Mg 2+
Mg 2+ (mg L -1 )
8
Control CO2 O3 CO2+O3
1400 (c) 1200
400
(d)
300 200 100
2 Control CO2
O3
0
CO2+O3
11/2008
614
03/2009
07/2009
Month/Year
615
Figure 1. The impact of elevated CO2 on cations in soil solutions in the field experiment. (a) Soil
616
Ca2+ and (b) Mg2+ in lysimeter solutions in 2007. (c) Soil Ca2+ and (d) Mg2+ in the PRS probes in
617
the year 2008-2009. Treatments include ambient CO2 (Control), elevated CO2 (CO2), elevated O3
618
(O3), and combinations of elevated CO2 and O3 (CO2+O3). Data shown are mean ± SE (n=4).
619 620 621 622 623 624 625
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5.6
6.3
(a)
Ambient CO2
6.0
5.4
Elevated CO2
5.7
5.2
Soil pH
Soil pH
(b)
5.0
5.4 5.1
4.8 4.8 4.6 Control
CO2
O3
CO2+O3
Low
High
NH4+
626
Low
High
NO3-
627
Figure 2. Soil pH responses to atmospheric CO2 enrichment in the field experiment in 2009 (a).
628
Treatments include ambient CO2 (Control), elevated CO2 (CO2), elevated O3 (O3), and
629
combinations of elevated CO2 and O3 (CO2+O3). And soil pH responses to atmospheric CO2
630
enrichment and reactive N inputs in the microcosm experiment (b). Data shown are mean ± SE
631
(n=4).
632
29 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
(a)
aCO2 low NH4 aCO2 low NO3
Ca2+ (g m-2)
10
eCO2 low NH4
8
eCO2 low NO3
10
+
(c)
-
8
-
6 4
0 4
eCO2 high NH4
6
eCO2 high NO3
+ -
4
0 4 (d)
(b) 3
Mg2+ (g m-2)
3
Mg2+ (g m-2)
aCO2 high NO3
+
2
2
2
1
2
1
0
0 44
633
aCO2 high NH4
+
Ca2+ (g m-2)
12
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69
97
124
158
44
Days after germination
69
97
124
158
Days after germination
634
Figure 3. Cumulative soil leachate cations as affected by CO2 concentrations and N species in
635
the microcosm study. (a) Ca2+ and (b) Mg2+ in soil leachates under the low N level. (c) Ca2+ and
636
(d) Mg2+ in soil leachates under the high N level. Soil leachates were collected using mini-
637
lysimeters: at ambient (dashed line) and elevated CO2 (solid line). Data shown are mean ± SE
638
(n=4).
639 640 641 642
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643 644
Figure 4. A unifying framework of plant-mediated proton (H+) production under elevated CO2
645
and different N species. Solid lines indicate positive effects on plant/microbial proton production,
646
but a dashed line indicates a negative effect on proton production. Plant NO3- uptake increases
647
plant excretion of hydroxyl ions (OH-) to maintain cation-anion balance, partially offsetting H+
648
generation.
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