Deep accumulation of soluble organic nitrogen after land-use conversion from woodlands to orchards in a subtropical hilly region

Sci Total Environ. 2023 Mar 10:863:160931. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.160931. Epub 2022 Dec 15.

Abstract

Accumulation of soluble organic nitrogen (SON) in soil poses a significant threat to groundwater quality and plays an important role in regulating the global nitrogen cycle; however, most related studies have focused only on the upper 100-cm soil layers. Surface land-use management and soil properties may affect the vertical distribution of SON; however, their influence is poorly understood in deep soil layers. Therefore, this study assessed the response of SON concentration, pattern, and storage in deep regoliths to land-use conversion from woodlands to orchards in a subtropical hilly region. Our results showed that the SON stocks of the entire soil profile (up to 19.5 m) ranged from 254.5 kg N ha-1 to 664.1 kg N ha-1. Land-use conversion not only reshaped the distribution pattern of SON, but also resulted in substantial accumulation of SON at the 0-200 cm soil profile in the orchards compared to that in the woodlands (124.1 vs 190.5 kg N ha-1). Land-use conversion also altered the SON/total dissolved nitrogen ratio throughout the regolith profile, resulting in a relatively low (<50 %) ratio in orchard soils below 200 cm. Overall, 76.8 % of SON (338.4 ± 162.0 kg N ha-1) was stored in the layers from 100 cm below the surface to the bedrock. Regolith depth (r = -0.52 and p < 0.05) was found to be significantly correlated with SON concentration, explaining 17.8 % of the variation in SON, followed by total nitrogen (14.4 %), total organic carbon/total nitrogen ratio (10.1 %), and bulk density (9.3 %). This study provides insights into the estimation of terrestrial nitrogen and guidance for mitigation of groundwater contamination risk due to deep accumulation of SON.

Keywords: Deep soils; Earth's critical zone; Land use conversion; Soluble organic nitrogen; Subtropical hilly region.