The mechanisms responsible for nitrous oxide (N 2 O) emission and the potential for nitrate leaching under seasonally open solar greenhouses were investigated in a nitrogen-15 ( 15 N) tracer study during the summer fallow period in Yangling, Shaanxi Province, China. 15 N-labelled urea and KNO 3 were applied at 30 (U1, K1) and 60 (U2, K2) kg N/ha, respectively, to microplots in a solar greenhouse after harvest of tomatoes. Large N 2 O emissions resulted from each treatment, with a total N 2 O flux of 482, 1481, 2283, 656 and 991 g N/ha for control (CK), U1, U2, K1 and K2, respectively, were primarily observed during the first month of the summer fallow period, reflecting the combination of considerable residual nitrate, soil organic matter and rainfall. The total 15 N-N 2 O flux was 35.2, 37.2, 7.9 and 11.2 g N/ha for U1, U2, K1 and K2, respectively, accounting for 0.54, 0.40, 0.17 and 0.12% of the applied N, suggesting that both nitrification and denitrification contributed to the enhanced N 2 O emission. After 2 months of fallow, only 52.08-54.78% of applied 15 N remained in the top 0-40 cm soil layer, where there was the main concentration of tomato roots. Of the total 15 N-labelled KNO 3 applied, 86.76% (K1) and 82.06% (K2) remained in the 0-100 cm soil layers and the rest of the N (about 13.07% for K1 and 17.82% for K2, calculated by subtracting 15 N-N 2 O loss and 15 N remaining in the 0-100 cm soil layers from the total applied 15 N) leached below 100 cm. Solar greenhouses in north-west China clearly have great potential for both N 2 O emission and nitrate leaching during the summer fallow period.