Abstract
Agriculture is a significant source of carbon dioxide
(CO2) and methane (CH4) and is the
dominant source of anthropogenic nitrous oxide (N2O)
emissions. Changes in agricultural land management practices that reduce
overall greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have been suggested to help
mitigate climate change, but a better understanding of the timing,
magnitude, and drivers of GHG fluxes is needed. Alfalfa agroecosystems
may be significant sources of N2O given their ability to
increase N inputs through symbiotic N2 fixation and
frequent irrigation events that create conditions for hot moments of
N2O production. However, few studies have explored
long-term N2O emissions and their associated drivers in
alfalfa ecosystems. We collected over 108,000 CO2,
CH4 and N2O soil flux measurements over
four years using cavity ring-down spectroscopy from a conventional
flood-irrigated alfalfa field in California, USA. This ecosystem was a
consistent source of N2O (annual mean: 624.4 ± 27.8 mg
N2O m-2 yr-1, range:
263.6. ± 5.6 to 901.9 ± 74.5 mg N2O
m-2 yr-1) and a small net sink of
CH4 (annual mean: -53.5 ± 2.5 mg CH4
m-2 yr-1, range: -78.2 ± 8.8 to
-31.6 ± 2.5 mg CH4 m-2
yr-1). Soil CO2 fluxes averaged 4925.9
± 13.5 g CO2 m-2
yr-1 and were greater than other alfalfa ecosystem
estimates, likely driven by elevated temperatures and plant productivity
throughout the growing season. Hot moments of N2O
emissions represented only 0.2% to 1.1% of annual measurements but
were 31.6% to 56.8% of the annual flux. We found that both the
magnitude and the contribution of N2O hot moments to
annual emissions decreased over time. Normalized difference vegetation
index (NDVI), soil temperature, moisture, and O2 were
all significantly correlated with soil CO2,
N2O, and CH4 fluxes, although
associations varied across both soil depth and timescales. Our results
suggest that flood-irrigated alfalfa is a significant source of
agricultural N2O emissions, and that plant productivity
and soil moisture effects on O2 availability may
modulate the net GHG budget of alfalfa agroecosystems.