Haijun Hou
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Haijun Hou.
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2012
Zhe Chen; Haijun Hou; Yan Zheng; Hongling Qin; Yijun Zhu; Jinshui Wu; Wenxue Wei
BACKGROUND Denitrification is a microbial process that has received considerable attention during the past decade since it can result in losses of added nitrogen fertilisers from agricultural soils. Paddy soil has been known to have strong denitrifying activity, but the denitrifying microorganisms responsible for fertilisers in paddy soil are not well known. The objective of this study was to explore the impacts of 17-year application of inorganic and organic fertiliser (rice straw) on the abundance and composition of a nosZ-denitrifier community in paddy soil. Soil samples were collected from CK plots (no fertiliser), N (nitrogen fertiliser), NPK (nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium fertilisers) and NPK + OM (NPK plus organic matter). The nitrous oxide reductase gene (nosZ) community composition was analysed using terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism, and the abundance was determined by quantitative PCR. RESULTS Both the largest abundance of nosZ-denitrifier and the highest potential denitrifying activity (PDA) occurred in the NPK + OM treatment with about four times higher than that in the CK and two times higher than that in the N and NPK treatments (no significant difference). Denitrifying community composition differed significantly among fertilisation treatments except for the comparison between CK and N treatments. Of the measured abiotic factors, total organic carbon was significantly correlated with the observed differences in community composition and abundance (P < 0.01 by Monte Carlo permutation). CONCLUSION This study shows that the addition of different fertilisers affects the size and composition of the nosZ-denitrifier community in paddy soil.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Xiaohong Wu; Wei Wang; Xiaoli Xie; Chunmei Yin; Haijun Hou; Wende Yan; Guangjun Wang
This study provides a complete account of global warming potential (GWP) and greenhouse gas intensity (GHGI) in relation to a long-term water management experiment in Chinese double-rice cropping systems. The three strategies of water management comprised continuous (year-round) flooding (CF), flooding during the rice season but with drainage during the midseason and harvest time (F-D-F), and irrigation only for flooding during transplanting and the tillering stage (F-RF). The CH4 and N2O fluxes were measured with the static chamber method. Soil organic carbon (SOC) sequestration rates were estimated based on the changes in the carbon stocks during 1998–2014. Longer periods of soil flooding led to increased CH4 emissions, reduced N2O emissions, and enhanced SOC sequestration. The net GWPs were 22,497, 8,895, and 1,646 kg CO2-equivalent ha−1 yr−1 for the CF, F-D-F, and F-RF, respectively. The annual rice grain yields were comparable between the F-D-F and CF, but were reduced significantly (by 13%) in the F-RF. The GHGIs were 2.07, 0.87, and 0.18 kg CO2-equivalent kg−1 grain yr−1 for the CF, F-D-F, and F-RF, respectively. These results suggest that F-D-F could be used to maintain the grain yields and simultaneously mitigate the climatic impact of double rice-cropping systems.
Biology and Fertility of Soils | 2018
Hongling Qin; Yafang Tang; Jianlin Shen; Cong Wang; Chunlan Chen; Jie Yang; Yi Liu; Xiangbi Chen; Yong Li; Haijun Hou
Agricultural management significantly affects methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions from paddy fields. However, little is known about the underlying microbiological mechanism. Field experiment was conducted to investigate the effect of the water regime and straw incorporation on CH4 and N2O emissions and soil properties. Quantitative PCR was applied to measure the abundance of soil methanogens, methane-oxidising bacteria, nitrifiers, and denitrifiers according to DNA and mRNA expression levels of microbial genes, including mcrA, pmoA, amoA, and nirK/nirS/nosZ. Field trials showed that the CH4 and N2O flux rates were negatively correlated with each other, and N2O emissions were far lower than CH4 emissions. Drainage and straw incorporation affected functional gene abundance through altered soil environment. The present (DNA-level) gene abundances of amoA, nosZ, and mcrA were higher with straw incorporation than those without straw incorporation, and they were positively correlated with high concentrations of soil exchangeable NH4+ and dissolved organic carbon. The active (mRNA-level) gene abundance of mcrA was lower in the drainage treatment than in continuous flooding, which was negatively correlated with soil redox potential (Eh). The CH4 flux rate was significantly and positively correlated with active mcrA abundance but negatively correlated with Eh. The N2O flux rate was significantly and positively correlated with present and active nirS abundance and positively correlated with soil Eh. Thus, we demonstrated that active gene abundance, such as of mcrA for CH4 and nirS for N2O, reflects the contradictory relationship between CH4 and N2O emissions regulated by soil Eh in acidic paddy soils.
Applied Soil Ecology | 2012
Jinbo Liu; Haijun Hou; Rong Sheng; Zhe Chen; Yijun Zhu; Hongling Qin; Wenxue Wei
European Journal of Soil Science | 2016
Hongling Qin; Z. X. Zhang; J. Lu; Y. J. Zhu; R. Webster; Xinliang Liu; Hongzhao Yuan; Haijun Hou; Chen Cl; Wenxue Wei
Archive | 2012
Haijun Hou; Yijun Zhu; Zhenxing Zhang; Wenxue Wei
Geoderma | 2017
Ling Wang; Rong Sheng; Huicui Yang; Qing Wang; Wenzhao Zhang; Haijun Hou; Jinshui Wu; Wenxue Wei
Biotechnology Letters | 2016
Hongling Qin; Xiangbi Chen; Yafang Tang; Haijun Hou; Rong Sheng; Jinlin Shen
Paddy and Water Environment | 2018
Xiaohong Wu; Wei Wang; Xiaoli Xie; Haijun Hou; Chunmei Yin
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2018
Wenzhao Zhang; Rong Sheng; Miaomiao Zhang; Guiyun Xiong; Haijun Hou; Shuanglai Li; Wenxue Wei