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Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology ›› 2010, Vol. 21 ›› Issue (01): 255-259.

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Atmospheric dry and wet nitrogen deposition |in typical agricultural areas of North Shaanxi. 

WEI Yang1, TONG Yan-an1, DUAN Min1, QIAO Li2, TIAN Hong-wei3, LEI Xiao-ying4, MA Wen-juan1   

  1. 1College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, Northwest Agriculture &Forestry University, Yangling 712100, Shaanxi, China|2Shaanxi Provincial Meteorological Bureau, Xi’an 710014, China|3Yuyang Meteorological Bureau, Yulin 719000, Shaanxi, China|4Luochuan Meteorological Bureau, Yan'an 727400, Shaanxi, China
  • Online:2010-01-20 Published:2010-01-20

Abstract: To investigate the farmland soil nitrogen input from atmospheric dry and wet deposition, a 1-year observation was conducted in the Yulin and Luochuan areas of North Shaanxi Province from June 2007 to May 2008. The total inorganic nitrogen (TIN) deposition in Yulin and Luochuan was 22.17 and 16.95 kg·hm-2·a-1, among which, wet deposition accounted for 95.1% and 90.4%, while dry deposition accounted for 4.9% and 9.6%, respectively, illustrating that the nitrogen deposition in both Yulin and Luochuan was mainly come from wet deposition. In the TIN deposition, the amount of nitrate in Yulin and Luochuan was 12.22 and 9.24 kg·hm-2·a-1, accounting for 55.1% and 54.5%, respectively. The amount of wet deposition and the percentage of nitrate in TIN deposition were higher in Yulin than in Luochuan, because of the differences in pollution level, weather condition, and underlying surface characteristics.

Key words: North Shaanxi, wet deposition, dry deposition, atmospheric nitrogen deposition, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, species diversity, elevational gradient, Tibetan Plateau