Quantifying the potential to reduce excess nitrogen flows within
pasture-based agricultural systems in Aotearoa New Zealand: designing
isotope tools
Abstract
High producing grazed pastures occupy almost one third of Aotearoa New
Zealand (268,000 km2) and produce exported protein to feed more than 40
million people. Trends within farming systems include increasing rates
of urea fertiliser use and greater concentrations of N via urine
deposition, which enhance N2O emissions and NO3 losses. Focussing on
N-sensitive lake catchments, we ask: what tools can reduce uncertainties
in the sources and magnitude of N losses, quantify the potential to
reduce excess N, and clarify rates of change in N budgets. Dual-isotope
NO3 measurements differentiate urine and urea-derived sources (δ15N
< 4 ‰) from mineralized soil organic N (δ15N of 4–8 ‰).
Nitrate in streams draining the Rotorua region’s pumice soils and
aquifers is dominated by urine and urea sources, compared to streams
flowing from finer soils that only show these lower δ15N values when
large runoff events activate surface flow paths. We have confirmed that
shifts in stream water δ2H and δ18O toward the values observed in the
major rainfall event coincide with elevated [NO3] and low δ15N
representative of urine and urea-derived sources. A combination of δ2H
and δ18O and Δ14C in dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) largely confirmed
tritium-based assessments, suggesting lag times of many decades in some
aquifers, but rapid responses to recent N inputs elsewhere. In the
Southland region, where tile drainage enables effective pasture growth,
we explored flow responses in a drainage tile where NO3 consistently
showed an imprint of denitrification (δ15N > 12 ‰). In this
location following major rainfall, [NO3] remained stable but
dissolved organic N concentrations increased, at times associated with
stormwater δ2H and δ18O shifts. The Δ14C in DIC yielded apparent ages of
several hundred years during low-flow periods, suggesting ongoing
breakdown of soil organic matter releases N, which should be considered
in farm and catchment N budgets. We conclude that monitoring N
concentrations and multiple isotope species can resolve control points
of N excess, which reveal targets for potential mitigation.
Specifically, N content in clover-ryegrass pastures seasonally exceeds N
demand in grazing animals, suggesting alternate species or feeds could
reduce animal urinary N excretion, and therefore limit soil-derived N2O
emissions and NO3 losses.