Premium
Effect of N supply on apparent recovery of fertilizer N as crop N and N min in soil during and after cultivation of winter cereals
Author(s) -
Blankenau Klaus,
Kuhlmann Hermann
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
journal of plant nutrition and soil science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.644
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1522-2624
pISSN - 1436-8730
DOI - 10.1002/(sici)1522-2624(200002)163:1<91::aid-jpln91>3.0.co;2-#
Subject(s) - fertilizer , crop , mineralization (soil science) , agronomy , chemistry , zoology , nitrogen , biology , organic chemistry
Field trials were conducted over two years to investigate the effect of increasing N supply on apparent fertilizer N recovery by winter cereal crops (4 × wheat and 2 × barley) and on non‐recovered N. Apparent fertilizer N recovery was calculated by comparing N in fertilized and unfertilized crops. Non‐recovered N is defined as N which was neither found in crops nor soil mineral N (N min = NH 4 ‐N + NO 3 ‐N). At N supply levels according to common farming practice (N cfp = 190 to 220 kg N/ha), 60— 93% of the fertilizer N was recovered in crops at harvest, while at high N supply levels of 265 to 273 kg N/ha 58—76% of fertilizer N was recovered. There were small differences in soil N min in 0—200 cm between N cfp and unfertilized plots, but substantial increases in N min occurred at the highest N supply. Amounts of non‐recovered N differed substantially between sites (maximum value of 84 kg N/ha). Non‐recovered N increased with increasing N rate on only 3 out of the 6 sites, indicating that N immobilization was not necessarily dependent on N rate. The fate of non‐recovered N was studied for a further year by growing catch crops on the sites after cereal harvest. N re‐mineralization deduced from changes in catch crop N and in N min indicated that non‐recovered N had been immobilized in the soil. At three sites, crop N uptake was found between milk‐ripe stage and harvest (19 to 60 kg N/ha) suggesting substantial uptake of N mineralized from soil. However, grain yields were lower with N rates below N cfp , indicating that late net soil N mineralization could not compensate for reductions in N fertilizer rate in these trials.