北京林业大学英文网

BFU News

Student research on nitrogen deposition makes headlines in leading journal

Source:School of Grassland Science   

Jun. 16 2025

Latest news

Master student Zhao Yi from Beijing Forestry University's School of Grassland Science has pioneered a novel approach to simulate natural nitrogen deposition patterns, published in the top ecology journal Methods in Ecology and Evolution. The study, titled "Resin-coated urea effectively simulates the chronic dynamics of natural nitrogen deposition", demonstrates that resin-coated slow-release urea outperforms traditional fertilizers in mimicking continuous atmospheric nitrogen deposition—a key breakthrough for ecosystem research.

2aeea56849ac83499ca1546aa0127a96_c01e10276b464ab3babe3fae1d9e8d6b.png

Atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition has more than tripled globally since the Industrial Revolution. Experiments usually simulate N deposition using fast-release N fertilizers applied once or several times a year. However, these pulses differ from the continuous N supply of natural deposition, which may lead to different outcomes. There is an urgent need for methodologies that more accurately replicate continuous N deposition to better understand its causal impacts on future biological outcomes.

The team developed a resin-coated slow-release urea to stimulate the continuous N deposition dynamics in semiarid grasslands. Three urea ball sizes with varying resin coating thicknesses were designed to achieve year-long release. We then compared the N release rate of the coated fertilizer to rate of natural N deposition to assess its effectiveness in replicating the temporal pattern of N deposition.

图片2.png



图片3.png

The results showed that under the semiarid conditions of our site, the resin-coated urea with a 0.5 mm coating on 4 mm diameter balls released urea continuously for approximately 12 months. The temporal pattern of N release rate of the fertilizer was very similar to local atmospheric N deposition. There was a strong positive relationship between N release rates and N deposition (R2 = 0.80), with both exhibiting simultaneous peaks and valleys.

The results indicate that resin-coated urea with a pellet size and coating thickness determined by local site conditions can effectively simulate the temporal dynamics of N deposition. Coated urea provides a far more effective approach for experimentally simulating future impacts of elevated N deposition on ecosystem function and processes compared to fast-release fertilizers.

Zhao Yi is the first author of the paper, with Professor Yu Qiang as the corresponding author. This study was financially supported by National Key R&D Program of China (2022YFF1300603, 2022YFE0128000), National Natural Science Foundation of China (32061123005, 32171592) and Scientific and Technological Innovation Project of China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences (CI2024C003YN).

Paper link: https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/2041-210X.70061


Written by Zhao Yi
Translated and edited by Song He
Reviewed by Yu Yangyang