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Ammonia volatilization from Vertisols
Authors:D O Sigunga    B H Janssen  & O Oenema
Institution:Department of Soil Science, Egerton University, PO Box 536, Njoro, Kenya;, and
Department of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition, Wageningen University, PO Box 8005, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Abstract:Farmers want to minimize losses of nitrogen (N) by volatilization of ammonia when adding fertilizers and improve fertilizer recovery of N by plants. We aimed to quantify the losses of N through NH3 volatilization as affected by soil moisture content, type of fertilizer, and placement method in Vertisols in Kenya, and conducted three experiments for the purpose under controlled conditions in the laboratory. We found that NH3-N losses were greatest at 80% water holding capacity, which we ascribed to the ready availability of water to dissolve the fertilizer at that water content. The soil's cation exchange capacity (CEC) did not influence volatilization, whereas the soil's pH indicated the potential of the soil to volatilize ammonia. Ammonia losses from the fertilizers were in the order urea > ammonium sulphate > ammonium nitrate applied. Incorporating fertilizer within the 0–5 cm soil layer more than halved NH3 volatilization but did not prevent it completely. These results indicate that soil pH, rather than CEC, is the main inherent characteristic influencing ammonia volatilization from Vertisols. Ammonium-based fertilizers should be incorporated within the 0–5 cm soil layer, or preferably somewhat deeper, to avoid losses via NH3 volatilization, particularly in alkaline soils. Nitrate fertilizers are preferable to urea where the risks of NH3 volatilization are large, provided due consideration is given to denitrification risks.
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