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Emission of nitric oxide from soils and termite nests in a Trachypogon savanna of the Orinoco basin
Authors:Alberto Rondón  Christer Johansson  Fugenio Sanhueza
Institution:(1) Department of Meteorology, Stockholm University, S-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden;(2) Present address: Atmospheric Chemistry Laboratory, IVIC, Apartado 21827, 1020-A Caracas, Venezuela;(3) Present address: Environment and Health Protection Administration, Bureau of Air Quality Control, Box 38024, S-100 64 Stockholm, Sweden
Abstract:Nitric oxide fluxes from soils in the Trachypogon savanna of the Orinoco basin were determined during the dry season using the static chamber method. The emission from dry soils fluctuated from 0.4 to 3 ng N m–2 s–1 and increased up to 25 ng N m–2 s–1 after moderate watering or light rain-falls (1 to 5 mm). The mean emission values are up to 6 times lower than one observed earlier at the Chaguaramas site, but up to 10 times higher than one recorded at the Guri site, indicating an important spatial variability in NO fluxes of the Venezuelan savanna region. The changes observed after the addition of nitrogen to the soil, in the form of ammonium and/or nitrate, indicate a high denitrification potential in this acidic soil. Burning of the surface vegetation produced an increase by a factor of 10 in the emission rate of NO, but the effect was relatively short in time, about 5 days. It was estimated for the savanna region that burning increases the total NO soil emission during the dry season by 15% compared to the unburnt case. Soils with termite nests emit 10 times more NO than soil without nests, but the contribution from this source is less than 2% of the total savanna soil flux.
Keywords:NO soil fluxes  tropical savanna  termites  vegetation burning
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