Abstract
Although representing a paramount mechanism against nitrogen excess in agricultural landscapes, soil denitrification is still a largely unknown term in nitrogen balances at the watershed scale. In the present work, a comprehensive investigation of nitrogen sources and sinks in agricultural soils and waters was performed with the aim of gaining insights into the relevance of soil denitrification in a highly farmed sub-basin of the Po River delta (Northern Italy). Agricultural statistics, water quality datasets, and results of laboratory experiments targeting nitrogen fluxes in soils were combined to set up a detailed nitrogen budget along the terrestrial-freshwater continuum. The soil nitrogen budget was not closed, with inputs exceeding outputs by 72 kg N-ha_1-year_1, highlighting a potential high risk of nitrate contamination. However, extensive monitoring showed a general scarcity of mineral nitrogen forms in both shallow aquifers and soils. The present study confirmed the importance of denitrification, representing ~37% of the total nitrogen inputs, as the leading process of nitrate removal in heavily fertilized fine-texture soils prone to waterlogged conditions.
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Castaldelli, G., Vincenzi, F., Fano, E. A., & Soana, E. (2020). In search for the missing nitrogen: Closing the budget to assess the role of denitrification in agricultural watersheds. Applied Sciences (Switzerland), 10(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/app10062136
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