Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Salt-Affected Soils: Mechanistic Understanding of Interplay Factors and Reclamation Approaches
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Salt-Affected Soils, Global Extent, and Distribution
3. Microbial Response to Salinity and Sodicity
3.1. Effect of Salinity/Sodicity on Nitrification/Denitrification
3.1.1. Nitrification
3.1.2. Denitrification
3.2. Effect of Salinity/Sodicity on Methanogenesis/Methanotrophs
4. GHG Emissions from Salt-Affected Soils
4.1. Nitrous Oxide Emissions
References | Systems and Study Locations | Treatments Details | Observation of the Study (GHG Emissions) | Key Findings/Reasoning |
---|---|---|---|---|
Field experiments | ||||
Li et al. [25] | Field experiment at Kunshan field station, Suzhou, China. | Nonsaline (S0), salinity-S1 (1 dS m−1), and salinity-S5 (5 dS m−1) | N2O emission increased by 89–110% at S1 and decreased by about 20% at S2. | Saline soils could be a potential source of N2O emissions when cultivated. So, mitigation options should be explored. |
Ma et al. [54] | Long-term (2009–2018) field experiment in calcareous soil at the experimental station of Shihezi University, China. | N0 (no N) + SF (fresh water, 0.35 dS m−1); N0 + SH (saline water, 8.04 dS m−1); N360 (360 kg N ha−1) + SF; N360 + SH | Irrigation with saline water inhibited N2O emission, by 45.19% (N0) and 43.50% (N360) compared with irrigation with fresh water | Saline water irrigation altered community structures of denitrifying bacteria with nirK, nirS, and nosZ |
Capooci et al. [31] | Field experiment at temperate salt marsh connected to the Atlantic Ocean. | Control (17 ppt); treatment (12.4–18.6 ppt) | Soils subjected to low salinity had greater GHG emissions than control soils (17 ppt). Treatment soils had a 23% increase in GWP. | The storm surges can produce pulses of GHG emissions. |
Zhang et al. [88] | GHG emissions from three rice (R1, R2, and R3) and maize (M1, M2, M3) fields with different salinity at Songyuan City of the Western Jilin Province, Northeast China. | R1 (pH: −7.6, EC: −0.16); R2 (pH: −8.6, EC: −0.27); R3 (pH: −9.1, EC: −0.41) | GWP of rice fields ranged 1070.0–1996.2 kg CO2 eq ha−1. | Higher pH and salinity conditions consistently resulted in lower CO2, CH4, and N2O emissions and CH4 uptake. |
M1 (pH: −7.34, EC: −0.10); M2 (pH: −7.76, EC: −0.19); M3 (pH: −8.43, EC: −0.25) | GWP of maize fields ranged 600.5–1149.8 kg CO2 eq ha−1. | |||
Poffenbarger et al. [89] | Metadata analysis based on secondary in-situ studies (31 nos.) of CH4 emissions from tidal marshes | Fresh (salinity < 0.5 ppt); Oligohaline (0.5–5.0 ppt); Mesohaline (5–18 ppt); Polyhaline (>18 ppt) | Oligohaline marshes had the highest and most variable CH4 emissions (150 ± 221 gm−2 yr−1). Negligible CH4 emissions in polyhaline, and no significant difference between fresh and mesohaline marshes. | Need to estimate or monitor CH4 emissions in lower-salinity marshes. |
Laboratory experiments | ||||
She et al. [90] | Laboratory experiment with different textured soil. | Sandy clay loam + S1 (0.10–1.0% soil salinity); Sandy loam + S1; Silty clay + S1 | Cumulative CO2 emissions in the coarse-textured (sandy clay loam and sandy loam) soils were more (206–231 and 176–204 mg CO2 kg−1) affected by salinity than in the fine-textured (silty clay) soil. | Soil texture controlled the negative effect of salinity on C mineralization by regulating the soil microbial community composition. |
Jia et al. [26] | Low salinity wetland (LW-Pragmites australis) and High salinity wetland (HW-Suaeda sals) soils were collected and incubated. | LW soils (3.18 ppt salinity, 0.28 SAR); HW soils (13.30 ppt salinity, 0.03 SAR) | N2O emissions were promoted in low salinity wetland (0.060 mg N2O kg−1) but significantly inhibited in high salinity wetlands (0.008 mg N2O kg−1) | Study suggests the complexity and uniqueness of N2O emissions responses to nitrogen inputs related to the salinity levels. |
Zhang et al. [91] | Samples of saline-alkali soils were collected from four different locations in Yellow River Delta | Bare land soil (no vegetation) S0 (Control); S1 (1 mg g−1); S3 (3 mg g−1); S5 (5 mg g−1) | CO2 emission ranged from 88.55 (S0)–51.77 (S3) mg CO2 kg−1 and N2O 0.030 (S0)–0.012 (S3) mg N2O kg−1. | The N2O and CO2 emissions of were highest in herbage communities, intermediate in woody communities, and lowest in bare land under all treatments. The salinity effect on GHG emissions was stronger in soils with low salt levels. Higher GHG emissions at high soil moisture were found in all soils. |
Land covered with woody (T. chinensis) community vegetation. | CO2 emission ranged from 282.28 (S0)–231.46 (S4) mg CO2 kg−1 and N2O 0.252 (S4)–0.163 (S2) mg N2O kg−1. | |||
Land covered with herbage (S. sals) community vegetation | CO2 emission ranged from 504.33 (S0)–400.39 (S4) mg CO2 kg−1 and N2O 0.08 (S1)–0.036 (S4) mg N2O kg−1. | |||
Land covered with herbage (P. australis) community vegetation | CO2 emission ranged from 518.46 (S0)–391.27 (S4) mg CO2 kg−1 and N2O 0.153 (S1)–0.041 (S3) mg N2O kg−1. | |||
Ghosh et al. [30] | Soil samples from three different locations within a salt affected agricultural land and incubated for 30 days. | S1 (0.44 dS m−1); S2 (7.20 dS m−1); S3 (4.55 dS m−1) | The N2O emissions significantly increased by 39.8% and 42.4% in S2 and S3, respectively. The addition of N significantly increased cumulative N2O and CO2 emissions. | Saline-sodic soils can be a significant contributor to N2O. Further, N fertilizer, irrigation, and precipitation may enhance GHG emissions. |
Maucieri et al. [24] | Vertisol was collected from the experimental farm of University of Sydney and incubated for 30 days. | ECiw (0.09 dS m−1); ECiw (5 dS m−1); ECiw (10 dS m−1) | Saline water irrigation reduced CO2 emissions by 19% (5 dS m−1) and 28% (10 dS m−1). However, N2O emissions increased by 60% with salinity | Salinity decreased CO2 and increased N2O emission |
Thapa et al. [86] | Soil samples from Soil Health and Agriculture Research Extension (SHARE) farm were collected and incubated for 25 days. | ECe < 0.50 dS m−1 (60% WFPS); ECe 4.65 dS m−1 (60% WFPS); ECe 0.81 dS m−1 (90% WFPS); ECe 4.65 dS m−1 (90% WFPS) WFPS is a water-filled pore space | Relative decline in CO2 at higher ECe was smaller at 60% WFPS than at 90% WFPS. N2O emission decreased by 45% at 60% WFPS and increased by 223% at 90% WFPS. | Higher soil moisture increased substrate availability, salt dilution, and enhance microbial activity, causing higher CO2 and N2O emissions. |
Reddy and Crohn [29] | Collected soil samples from abandoned field of Coachella Valley, California and incubated for 60 days | S3 (2.8 dS m−1) (control); S15 (15.2 dS m−1); S30 (30.6 dS m−1) | Increased N2O emission by 18–24% (at S15) and 34–87% (at S30), but decreased CO2 emissions | The use of active organic amendments to remediate salt-affected soils can prove to be beneficial in mitigating N2O emission |
Marton et al. [27] | Soil samples were collected from tidal forests along the Altamaha, Ogeechee, and Satilla Rivers in southeast Georgia and incubated in the laboratory. | 0% (control); 2% saline water; 5% saline water | CH4 emission inhibited by 77% in the 2% and 89% in the 5% saline water treatment whereas CO2 generally increased with salinity, though exhibited a variable response between the three rivers. | Short-term salinity exposure enhanced anaerobic C mineralization, a decline in CH4 production, and a varied response in N2O production |
Pattnaik et al. [92] | Soil samples from three locations (a) CRRI, Cuttack (alluvial soil), (b) Ernakulam, Kerala (acid sulphate saline soil (Pokkali)), and (c) Canning, West Bengal, (coastal saline soil) of India were collected and incubated for 35 days | Alluvial soil (0.35 dS m−1) (control); Acid sulfate soil (5.01 dS m−1); Coastal saline soil (17.23 dS m−1) | CH4 production in non-saline alluvial soil was 630.86 ng CH4 g−1, and reduce remarkably in acid sulphate saline soil (12.97 ng CH4 g−1), and coastal saline soil (142.36 CH4 g−1) | High sulphate content of acid sulphate saline soil attributed to lower emission |
Alluvial: (0.35 dS m−1) (control); (4 dS m−1); (8 dS m−1); (16 dS m−1); (20 dS m−1) | Addition of salts to the non-saline alluvial soil at 4, 8, 16 and 20 dS m−1 progressively decreased CH4 production. | CH4 inhibition due to low microbial activities and soil microbial population including that of methanogens | ||
Pot experiments | ||||
Khatun et al. [28] | Pot study in net house at Bangladesh Agricultural University, Mymersingh, Bangladesh | Control (100% NPK); control + 25 nM NaCl; control + 50 nM NaCl; control + 75 nM NaCl | Decreased yield scaled CH4 emission from 7.5% (25 nM NaCl) to 25% (75 nM NaCl) | Phosphogypsum and biochar with recommended fertilizers in saline soils could mitigate yield scaled CH4 emissions |
Wei et al. [87] | Collected soil samples from the greenhouse of Nanjing Vegetables Scientific Institute, China, and conducted pot experiments. | Freshwater (0.3 dS m−1) + N120 (120 kg N ha−1); S1 (3.5 dS m−1) + N120; S2 (8.1 dS m−1) + N120; S3 (12.7 dS m−1) + N120 | Irrigation with S1 water lowered N2O emission and S2 enhanced emission by 58.3% | the effect degree of salinity on consumption and production of N2O might vary among irrigation salinity ranges |
4.2. Methane Emissions
4.3. Carbon Dioxide Emissions
5. Impact of Soil Amendments on GHG Emissions from Salt-Affected Soils
5.1. Impact of Gypsum and Phosphogypsum Application on GHG Emissions
5.2. Organic Amendments and GHG Emissions
5.3. Other Interventions for GHG Mitigation from Saline-Sodic Soils
6. Future Research Directions
- The Impacts of excess salts and high pH on GHG emissions from salt-affected soils are well documented. However, impacts of the individual ion toxicity on microbial population, enzymatic activities, and GHG production processes required further investigation.
- Mostly, studies are conducted in the pot and laboratory under controlled conditions. However, in real field conditions the emissions may be affected by several other parameters, therefore, how salinity and sodicity in actual field conditions affect the soil GHG emissions needs further investigation.
- How the other parameters such as soil carbon and nitrogen level, soil moisture, redox potential, precipitation, temperature, cyclones, etc. affect the seasonal variation of GHG emission from salt-affected soils before and after reclamation needs systematic investigation.
- Systematic investigations are needed to understand and quantify the effect of different amendments and reclamation technologies such as gypsum, phosphogypsum, organic manure, green manure, biochar, etc. on GHG emissions from these soils to develop the low carbon emission reclamation technologies for the management of salt-affected soils.
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Salinity Class | ECe (dS m−1) | ESP | (pHs) | (SARe) | Type of Dominant Salts | Problems Associated |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saline soils | >4 | <15 | <8.5 | <13 | High levels of soluble salts of chlorides (Cl−) and sulfate (SO42−) of sodium (Na+), calcium (Ca2+), and magnesium (Mg2+) | Hinder water absorption by plants due to high osmotic effects. Possible toxicity and antagonism of dominant ions at higher electrical conductivity |
Alkali/sodic Soils | <4 | >15 | >8.5 | >13 | High concentration of carbonate (CO32−) and bicarbonate (HCO3−) salts of sodium (Na+) in soil solution, and Na+ on exchange sites | Sodium, Carbonate, and bicarbonate toxicity to plants. Dispersion of soil structure due to high sodium content. Slaking, swelling, and hard setting of soil surface. Seasonal waterlogging |
Saline-alkali/sodic soils | >4 | >15 | Variable | >13 | The combined effect of excess salts and high exchangeable sodium percentage | Hinder water and nutrients uptake due to high osmotic effects. Sodium, carbonate, and bicarbonate toxicity to plants. Dispersion of soil structure due to high sodium content. Slaking, swelling, and hard setting of soil surface |
S. No. | Amendment Details | References |
---|---|---|
01 | Gypsum/phosphogypsum | [83,118,119] |
02 | Biochar | [81,114,115] |
03 | Humic acid | [118] |
04 | Rice straw compost | [120] |
05 | Cow manure | [81] |
06 | Deep tillage | [121] |
07 | Vermicompost | [121] |
08 | Azolla application | [122] |
09 | Cyanobacteria | [123] |
10 | Jatropha curcas | [124] |
11 | Sesbania green manure | [125] |
12 | Nitrification inhibitors (3,4-Dimethylpyrazole phosphate) | [126] |
References | Experiment Type | Treatment’s Detail | Observation (GHG Emissions) | Key Findings and Reasoning |
---|---|---|---|---|
Application of gypsum and phosphogypsum | ||||
Khatun et al. [28] | Pot experiment Initial soil pH = 7.8, EC = 5.6 dS m−1, OC = 1.48% | 25 nM salinity; 25 nM + phosphogypsum (P); 50 nM; 50 nM + P; 75 nM; 75 nM + P | Biochar amendment to saline soil reduced CH4 emission by 16.4% (25 mM) to 19.6% (at 75 mM) | Phospho-gypsum and biochar mitigate CH4 emissions due to improved soil redox potential (Eh), increased SO4− and decreased soil EC. |
Sun et al. [118] | Field experiment growing rice conducted in Jiangsu Province, China | N1 (300 kg N ha−1); N1 + humic acid; N1 + gypsum; N1 + humic acid + gypsum | CH4 emissions increased with Humic acid (6.2%), gypsum (19.4%), decreased with gypsum + humic acid (27.3%). Humic acid and gypsum application increase N2O emission | Humic acid and gypsum application with N300 kg N ha−1 is the better management for coastal saline soils of China to mitigate CH4 emission. |
Park et al. [131] | Field experiment with rice. | No by-product gypsum fertilizer (BGF); BGF (2 Mg ha−1); BGF (4 Mg ha−1); BGF (8 Mg ha−1) | CH4 flux decreased with increasing level of BGF, and BGF (8 Mg ha−1) reduced it by 60.6% compared to control. | BGF application could be a better management practice for CH4 mitigation from paddy soils. |
Ali et al. [132] | Field experiment with rice in upland soil. | Urea (250 kg ha−1); Urea + Phosphogypsum (90 kg ha−1); Urea + silicate slag (150 kg ha−1) | Silicate slag and phosphogypsum reduced CH4 emission by 18.0–23.5% and 14.7–18.6%, respectively. | Silicate slag and phosphogypsum decreased CH4 due to high free iron oxide and SO42− content which acted as electron acceptors |
Denier van der Gon and Neue, [127] | Field experiment with rice. | Urea (165 kg N ha−1); Urea + gypsum (6.60 t ha−1) | The CH4 emissions from gypsum amended plots were reduced by 55–70% compared to non-amended plots. | Inhibition of methanogenesis by sulfate-reducing bacteria caused a reduction in CH4 emission. |
Application of organic amendments (biochar, organic matter etc) | ||||
Sun et al. [133] | Field experiment with rice | N1 (300 kg N ha−1); N1 + 20 t biochar ha−1; N1 + 40 t biochar ha−1 | Biochar amendment increased N2O emissions by 13.7–38.1% and had no significant effects on CH4 emissions | Thus, long-term observations are needed to evaluate the environmental impacts of biochar and N fertilizers |
Maucieri et al. [24] | 30 days incubation experiment | Control; Biochar | Biochar amendment to saline soil decrease CH4 uptake (8.8%), CO2 (11.9%), and N2O (9.8%) emissions | Biochar amendment to soils mitigates GHG emissions where CO2 and N2O are driven by soil rewetting events. |
Datta et al. [109] | Rice experiment in irrigated saline soils of Gadakujang (a fishing hamlet) of coastal Odisha, India | Prilled urea (40 kg N ha−1); Sesbania green manure (5 Mg ha−1) + prilled urea (20 kg N ha−1); Ipomoea lacunose (5 Mg ha−1) + prilled urea (28 kg N ha−1) | Sesbania and Ipomoea lacunose green manure reduced CH4 emission by 23.2 and 29.9%. | Locally available Ipomoea lacunose green manure can use CH4 mitigation and yield enhancement from the coastal saline rice ecosystems |
Denier van der Gon and Neue, [127] | Field experiment with rice | GM (S. Rostrata: 20 t ha−1) + urea (30 kg urea ha−1); GM + urea + gypsum (6.60 t ha−1) | Green manure addition enhances CH4 emissions by 10 times than that of urea application alone, further gypsum addition reduced CH4 emission by about 71.1% | Database for CH4 emissions mitigation from rice grown on high-sulfate containing soils |
Chen et al. [134] | Field experiment was conducted in saline-sodic soils in the upper Yellow River basin, Northwest China | Organic fertilizer (CK), sheep manure (FYM), lignite bioorganic fertilizer (LBF1) (1.5 t ha−1) LBF2 (3 t ha−1), LBF3 (4.5 t ha−1), and LBF4 (7.5 t ha−1) | LBF treatments decreased CH4 and CO2, and increasing N2O emissions beyond 3 t ha−1 application rate. FYM acted as a CH4 source, and LBF2 and LBF3 treatments acted as CH4 sinks. | The application of lignite bioorganic fertilizer at 3.0–4.5 t ha−1 is appropriate for GHG mitigation in saline-sodic farmlands. |
Zheng et al. [135] | Microcosm experiments of 80 days incubation | Interaction of salinity (0 and 1.2% salt) with biochar |
5–10 times higher N2O emissions occurred from saline soils than that from non-saline soils. Aged biochar decreased N2O emissions and increased CO2 emissions in saline soils. | Aged biochar could be a better option for mitigation of N2O emissions from saline soils. |
Other amendments/interventions | ||||
Li et al. [126] | Field experiment with rice crop | Nonsaline (NS) soi; NS soil + DMPP (0.8% w/w of N); low saline (LS) soil; LS soil + DMPP; high saline (HS) soil; HS soil + DMPP | The nitrification inhibitor DMPP (3,4-dimethyl pyrazole phosphate) reduced cumulative N2O emissions by 61% in non-saline soil and by 75% in low saline soil | DMPP offsets low salinity-induced high N2O emissions by inhibiting ammonia oxidation. |
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Fagodiya, R.K.; Malyan, S.K.; Singh, D.; Kumar, A.; Yadav, R.K.; Sharma, P.C.; Pathak, H. Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Salt-Affected Soils: Mechanistic Understanding of Interplay Factors and Reclamation Approaches. Sustainability 2022, 14, 11876. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911876
Fagodiya RK, Malyan SK, Singh D, Kumar A, Yadav RK, Sharma PC, Pathak H. Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Salt-Affected Soils: Mechanistic Understanding of Interplay Factors and Reclamation Approaches. Sustainability. 2022; 14(19):11876. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911876
Chicago/Turabian StyleFagodiya, Ram K., Sandeep K. Malyan, Devendra Singh, Amit Kumar, Rajender K. Yadav, Parbodh C. Sharma, and Himanshu Pathak. 2022. "Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Salt-Affected Soils: Mechanistic Understanding of Interplay Factors and Reclamation Approaches" Sustainability 14, no. 19: 11876. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911876
APA StyleFagodiya, R. K., Malyan, S. K., Singh, D., Kumar, A., Yadav, R. K., Sharma, P. C., & Pathak, H. (2022). Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Salt-Affected Soils: Mechanistic Understanding of Interplay Factors and Reclamation Approaches. Sustainability, 14(19), 11876. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911876