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Effect of rice straw management on nitrogen balance and residual effect of urea-N in an annual lowland rice cropping sequence
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">S?PhongpanEmail author  A?R?Mosier
Institution:(1) Division of Agricultural Chemistry, Department of Agriculture, Bangkok 10900, Thailand;(2) United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, PO Box E, Fort Collins, CO 80522, USA
Abstract:Two field experiments were conducted in 1999 (wet season) and 2000 (dry season) on a Ustic Endoaquerts in central Thailand to examine the impact of rice straw management practices on rice yield, N uptake and fertilizer-N use efficiency. Treatments included a combination of urea broadcast at a rate of 70 kg N haу with either straw or compost which were incorporated at a rate of 5 Mg haу. At maturity of the wet season rice, 15N recovery by the grain was low (11-14%) as well as straw-N derived from labeled N (5-7%). After harvest, 25-29% of applied N still remained in the soil, mainly in the 0 to 5-cm layer. Large amounts of fertilizer-N (53-55%) were lost (unaccounted for) from the soil/plant system during the first crop. Residual fertilizer-N recovery in the second rice crop was less than 3% from the original application. During both fallow seasons NO3m-N remained the dominant form of mineral N (NO3m + NH4+) in the soil but its concentration was low. In the wet season grain yield response to N application was significant (P =0.05). Organic material sources did not significantly change grain yield and N accumulation in rice. In terms of grain yield and N uptake at maturity, there was no significant residual effect of fertilizer-N on the subsequent rice crop. These results indicated that the combined use of organic residues with urea did not decrease total N losses or increase crop yield or uptake of N compared to urea alone.
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