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1.
Abstract

It is important to understand the differential response of citrus rootstock to various rates of nitrogen (N) forms in order to evaluate the tree response to N availability under different production conditions. In this study, the effects of N sources (NH4‐N or NO3‐N), and rates (5, 15, 45, and 135 mg N L?1) on two citrus rootstock seedlings (Swingle citrumelo, SC; Cleopatra mandarin, CM) growth (110 d) and N concentrations in various parts of seedling were investigated in a nutrient solution experiment. The effects of N nutrition on the chloroplast ultrastructure of leaves were examined at the end of the experiment. Rootstock and N sources significantly influenced the growth of leaves, stems, and roots. The growth of all seedling parts of both rootstocks decreased with an increase in concentration of NH4‐N in the solution. In contrast, there was a positive relationship between the seedling growth and the concentration of NO3‐N in the nutrient solution with marked response observed as the NO3‐N concentration increased from 5 to 15 mg L?1 The experiment demonstrated a distinct growth suppression effect with an increase in concentration of NH4‐N in the nutrient solution, particularly SC rootstock. Chloroplast ultra‐structure of the leaves showed evidence of injury of the seedlings which received N entirely as NH4 + form, but the injury was not seen when the seedlings received N as the NO3‐N form. The disruption of chloroplast ultrastructure increased with increased rate of NH4‐N. The most conspicuous characteristic of ammonium toxicity was the massive accumulation of strands granules and phytoferritin which is clearly an evidence of NH3 toxicity. The results are important for understanding the implications of N source on seedling growth and chloroplast structure of citrus leaves.  相似文献   

2.
Understanding the fate of different forms of nitrogen (N) fertilizers applied to soils is an important step in enhancing N use efficiency and minimizing N losses. The growth and N uptake of two citrus rootstocks, Swingle citrumelo (SC), and Cleopatra mandarin (CM), seedlings were evaluated in a pot experiment using a Candler fine sand (hyperthermic, uncoated, Typic Quartzipsamments) without N application or with 400 mg N kg–1 applied as urea or controlled-release fertilizers (CRF; either as Meister, Osmocote, or Poly-S). Meister and Osmocote are polyolefin resin-coated urea with longevity of N release for 270 days (at 25°C). Poly-S is a polymer and sulfur-coated urea with release duration considerably shorter than that of either Meister or Osmocote. The concentrations of 2 M KCl extractable nitrate nitrogen (NO3 -N) and ammonium nitrogen (NH4 +-N) in the soil sampled 180 days and 300 days after planting were greater in the soil with SC than with CM rootstock seedlings. In most cases, the extractable NH4 + and NO3 concentrations were greater for the Osmocote treatment compared to the other N sources. For the SC rootstock seedlings, dry weight was greater with Meister or Poly-S compared with either Osmocote or urea. At the end of the experiment, ranking of the various N sources, with respect to total N uptake by the seedlings, was: Meister = Osmocote > Poly-S > Urea > no N for CM rootstock, and Meister = Poly-S = Osmocote > Urea > no N for SC rootstock. The study demonstrated that for a given rate of N application the total N uptake by seedlings was greater for the CRF compared to urea treatment. This suggests that various N losses were lower from the CRF source as compared to those from soluble fertilizers. Received: 11 April 1997  相似文献   

3.
Abstract

Chemical transformations of ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3) and urea‐nitrogen (N), at different rates of application, were studied in a Candler (Typic Quartzipsamment) and Wabasso (sandy, Alfic Haplaquod) sand by incubating fertilized surface soil (from 0 to 15 cm depth) samples at 10% moisture content (by weight) in the laboratory at 25±1°C. During the 7 d incubation, the percentage of transformation of NH4‐N into NO3‐N was 33 to 41 and 37 to 41% in the Candler fine sand and Wabasso sand, respectively, at application rates of 1.00 g N kg1. In a parallel experiment, 85 to 96% of urea applied (equivalent to 0.25 to 1.00 g N kg‐1soil) was hydrolyzed to NH4‐N within 4 d in the Candler soil, whereas it required 7 d to hydrolyze 90 to 95% of the urea applied in the Wabasso soil. No nitrification was evident for 30 days in the Candler fine sand which received urea application equivalent to ≥ 0.50 g N kg‐1. In the urea‐amended Wabasso sand, the formation of NO3 decreased as the rate of urea‐N increased. Possible loss of N from NH3 volatilization or inhibition of activity of nitrifiers due to elevated soil pH (8.7 to 9.2) during the incubation of urea amended soils may have caused very low nitrification.  相似文献   

4.
This study aims to elucidate the significance of compost and soil characteristics for the biological activity of compost‐amended soils. Two agricultural soils (Ap horizon, loamy arable Orthic Luvisol and Ah horizon, sandy meadow Dystric Cambisol) and a humus‐free sandy mineral substrate were amended with two biowaste composts of different maturity in a controlled microcosm system for 18 months at 5 °C and 14 °C, respectively. Compost application increased the organic matter mineralization, the Cmic : Corg ratio, and the metabolic quotients significantly in all treatments. The total amount of Corg mineralized ranged from < 1 % (control plots) to 20 % (compost amended Dystric Cambisol). Incubation at 14 °C resulted in 2.7‐ to 4‐fold higher cumulative Corg mineralization compared to 5 °C. The Cmic : Corg ratios of the compost‐amended plots declined rapidly during the first 6 months and reached a similar range as the control plots at the end of the experiment. This effect may identify the compost‐derived microbial biomass as an easily degradable C source. Decreasing mineralization rates and metabolic quotients indicated a shift from a compost‐derived to a soil‐adapted microbial community. The Corg mineralization of the compost amended soils was mainly regulated by the compost maturity and the soil texture (higher activity in the sandy textured soils). The pattern of biological activity in the compost‐amended mineral substrate did not differ markedly from that of the compost‐amended agricultural soils, showing that the turnover of compost‐derived organic matter dominated the overall decay process in each soil. However, a priming effect occurring for the Dystric Cambisol indicated, that the effect of compost application may be soil specific.  相似文献   

5.
  【目的】  土壤pH影响土壤锰 (Mn) 有效性,酸性土壤易出现Mn过量问题,我国柑橘主要分布在南方红黄壤区,柑橘园酸性或强酸性土壤比例高,柑橘园土壤Mn过量较普遍。为此,我们研究了4种柑橘砧木对Mn过量胁迫的耐受性和生理响应,以期为Mn过量土壤上适宜砧木的选择提供依据。  【方法】  选用枳、资阳香橙、红橘和沙田柚4种常用柑橘砧木苗为材料,采用蛭石与珍珠岩1∶1的基质进行了营养液栽培试验,营养液中Mn处理包括0.01 (对照)、0.05、0.25、1.25和6.25 mmol/L 5个浓度。观察砧木苗的生长反应和中毒症状,处理60天时,测定叶绿素含量和光合参数;处理67天终止处理,测定砧木苗生长量、生物量、过氧化物酶活性、营养元素含量等生理生化指标,并用隶属函数对砧木过量锰的耐受性进行综合评价。  【结果】  柑橘砧木苗出现锰中毒的症状为叶片失绿,出现褐色坏死斑点;根量变少,呈现褐色斑点。4种砧木苗均在Mn 0.25 mmol/L处理时出现Mn中毒症状,其中枳最先出现症状且最严重,资阳香橙最迟出现症状且最轻;4种砧木在Mn 0.05 mmol/L处理时即出现Mn过量胁迫,表现为地上部和地下部鲜重和干重显著下降,根冠比升高 (红橘除外)、叶绿素含量下降、净光合速率降低、气孔开度下降、胞间CO2浓度上升。Mn过量 (> 0.05 mmol/L) 胁迫使4种砧木叶片细胞膜受损,相对电导率和MDA含量上升;清除活性氧的SOD和POD活性上升,CAT活性下降。Mn过量胁迫影响柑橘砧木的营养元素吸收和转运,叶片和根系Mn含量上升,但随Mn胁迫浓度升高,Mn从根系到叶片的迁移率先降低后升高;Mn过量胁迫使砧木叶片K、P、Ca、Mg、Fe、Zn元素含量下降,根系K、P、Fe、Zn含量上升而Ca、Mg含量下降。  【结论】  不同砧木对Mn过量胁迫耐受性存在明显的差异,综合评价耐性强弱顺序为:资阳香橙 > 沙田柚 > 红橘 > 枳,高锰土壤的柑橘园可选用资阳香橙做砧木以减轻锰害。  相似文献   

6.
Azolla microphylla Kaulf. (Azolla) biomass was composted to create a high nitrogen (N) organic matter amendment (Azolla compost). We examined the effect of this Azolla compost on carbon (C) and N mineralization and the production of biogenic gases, nitrous oxide (N2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2), in a soil incubation experiment. A pot experiment with upland kangkong (Ipomoea aquatica Forsk.) examined plant growth in silt loam soil treated with three levels of Azolla compost. The results showed that N2O production from soil increased with urea amendment, but not with Azolla compost treatments. The Azolla-amended soil showed enhanced CO2 production throughout the 4-week incubation. The Azolla-treated soils showed a 98% lower global warming potential compared to urea treatment over the 4-week incubation. However, Azolla-amended soil had higher nitrate (NO3) levels compared to urea-fertilized soil at 1 week of incubation, and these were maintained until the fourth week. Soils amended with Azolla compost showed lower ammonium nitrogen (NH4-N) levels than those in the urea-fertilized soils. The height and dry weight of upland kangkong fertilized with Azolla compost were similar to plants receiving urea fertilization. Therefore, the use of Azolla compost as a substitute for urea fertilizer would be beneficial for reducing the production of N2O while maintaining plant growth.  相似文献   

7.
The capability to determine nitrogen availability of composts is necessary to ensure that such materials will provide sufficient fertilization to the growing crop and cause minimal environmental degradation. A greenhouse study using tall fescue as a bioindicator was used to evaluate nitrogen availability of two biosolids composts, two mixed yard waste-poultry manure composts, and one commercially-processed poultry litter. Five inorganic nitrogen (as NH4NO3-N) treatments applied at 0, 22.5, 45, 67.7, and 90 mg N/kg soil were employed to establish an N calibration curve. Yield, fescue biomass total nitrogen (as total Kjeldahl N (TKN)), and soil TKN and KCl extractable NO3?-N and NH4+-N concentrations of the organically amended treatments were compared to the inorganically fertilized treatments to determine amendment N mineralization rates and N fertilizer equivalent values (NFEV). Nitrogen mineralization rates were greatest in the poultry litter (21%) and Panorama yard waste compost (5%) amended pots. The NFEV of these amendments were 49% and 10%, respectively. Wolf Creek biosolids compost and Huck's Hen Blend yard waste compost immobilized N (?5% and 0.18%, respectively), and had percent NFEV of ?0.66% and 0.19%, respectively. Rivanna biosolids compost immobilized N (?15%), but the NFEV was 30% due to the relatively high inorganic N content in the amendment. Nitrogen mineralization and NFEV were generally greater in amendments with greater total N concentrations and lower C:N values. The total N concentration and C:N values were less reliable variables in predicting N mineralization and percent NFEV when a significant portion of the total N was in the inorganic form. Nitrogen equivalency value and N mineralization for each amendment increased with time of sampling, indicating the potential for early season N insufficiency to plants fertilized with compost due to lack of synchrony between N mineralization and plant N needs.  相似文献   

8.
Predicting nitrogen (N) mineralization has been one of the greatest challenges to improving N management in agriculture. A laboratory incubation experiment was conducted to study the N mineralization of soil amended with rock phosphate (RP)-enriched composts. The RP-enriched rice straw compost amended soil mineralized highest N as compared to compost prepared from mustard stover and tree leaves. The first-order model was found to be the most suitable for N because it provided the best fit to the experimental data and for its simplicity. The model predicted that potentially mineralized N (N0) was varied from 4.0 to 52.1 mg kg?1 and the mineralization rate k varied from 0.015 to 0.066 day?1. The rice straw compost amended soil had higher N0 value than mustard stover and tree leaves compost amended soil. This study demonstrated the importance of application of rock phosphate-enriched composts in improving N supplying capacity of soil.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract

This research evaluated effects of nitrogen fertilizers on availability of zinc (Zn) in soils. Two slit loams of the Hadley series (Typic Udifluvents) were used. Zinc sulfate was mixed with the soils to give Zn at 125, 250, 500, or 1,000 mg/kg and incubated for 14 days. Fertilizers (compost, cow manure, urea) were mixed with the soils to supply N at 200 mg/kg. Fourteen days after the fertilizers were mixed with the Zn‐treated soils, soil samples were taken for analysis of plant‐available Zn by extraction with Morgan's solution or water. After the soil samples were taken, fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb.) seeds were placed into pots to assess germination, growth, and Zn accumulation. Higher concentrations of Morgan's extractable Zn were detected in soils treated with compost (201 mg/kg) than with calcium nitrate (179 mg/kg), manure (153 mg/kg), or urea (152 mg/kg). However, with water extraction, higher Zn concentrations were detected in soils treated with calcium nitrate (36 mg/kg) with the lowest concentrations being extracted from soils treated with urea (8 mg/kg). Extraction of Zn by Morgan's solution or water increased as the soil‐Zn levels increased. Fescue germinated and grew at all of the soil‐Zn levels. The highest concentration of Zn occurred in plants grown in soils amended with calcium nitrate or urea, and the lowest concentration was in plants grown in soils amended with compost or manure. Fescue grown in soils amended with urea had the largest dry mass, and plants grown with compost or manure had the smallest. Zinc concentration and accumulation for fescue shoots increased as the soil‐Zn levels increased. These results suggest that accumulation of Zn in fescue can be enhanced by selection of nitrogen‐containing fertilizers that affect the solubility of Zn in soils.  相似文献   

10.
High yield agricultural systems, such as high tunnel (HT) vegetable production, require a large supply of soil nutrients, especially nitrogen (N). Compost is a common amendment used by HT growers both to supply nutrients and to improve physical and biological soil properties. We examined commercially-available composts and their effects on soil N, plant N uptake, and tomato yield in HT cultivation. In addition, a laboratory study examined N and carbon (C) mineralization from the composts, and the usefulness of compost properties as predictors of compost N mineralization was assessed under field and laboratory conditions. The field study used a randomized complete block design with four replications to compare four compost treatments (all added at the rate of 300 kg total N ha?1) with unamended soil and an inorganic N treatment (110 kg N ha?1). Tomatoes were grown in Monmouth, Maine during the summers of 2013 and 2014. Compost NO3?-N and NH4+-N application rates were significantly correlated with soil NO3?-N and NH4+-N concentrations throughout the growing season. Marketable yield was positively correlated with compost total inorganic N and NO3?-N in both years, and with NH4+-N in 2014. There were no significant differences among composts in percentage of organic N mineralized and no correlations were observed with any measured compost property. In the laboratory study, all compost-amended soils had relatively high rates of CO2 release for the initial few days and then the rates declined. The compost-amended soils mineralized 4%–6% of the compost organic N. This study suggested compost inorganic N content controls N availability to plants in the first year after compost application.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract

Dicyandiamide (DCD) is a nitrification inhibitor that has been proposed for use in drill‐seeded rice. Immobilization of fertilizer NH4 +‐N by soil microorganisms under aerobic conditions has been found to be significantly enhanced in the presence of a nitrification inhibitor. The objective of this laboratory study was to determine if DCD significantly delayed nitrification of urea‐derived N, and if this enhanced immobilization of the fertilizer N in the delayed‐flood soil system inherent to dry‐seeded rice culture. Nitrogen‐15‐labeled urea solution, with and without DCD (1: 9 w/w N basis), was applied to a Crowley silt loam (Typic Albaqualf) and the soil was incubated for 10 weeks in the laboratory. The soil was maintained under nonflooded conditions for the first four weeks and then a flood was applied and maintained for the remaining six weeks of incubation. The use of DCD significantly slowed the nitrification of the fertilizer N during the four weeks of nonflooded incubation to cause the (urea + DCD)‐amended soil to have a 2.5 times higher fertilizer‐derived exchangeable NH4+‐N concentration by the end of the fourth week. However, the higher exchangeable NH4+‐N concentration had no significant effect on the amount of fertilizer N immobilized during this period. Immobilization of the fertilizer N appeared to level off during the nonflood period about the second week after application. After flooding, immobilization of fertilizer N resumed and was much greater in the (urea + DCD)‐amended soil that had the much higher fertilizer‐derived exchangeable NH4 +‐N concentration. Immobilization of fertilizer N appeared to obtain a maximum in the urea‐amended soil (18%) about two weeks after flooding and for the (urea + DCD)‐amended soil (28%) about four weeks after flooding.  相似文献   

12.
Seeds of sour orange (Citrus aurantium L.) and Cleopatra mandarin (C. reticulata Blanco) were sown in Speedling trays filled with mixtures (v:v) of 0, 25, 50, 75 or 100 percent sugarcane filtercake compost (a natural waste by-product of sugarcane processing mills; bagasse) and a peat-lite medium. Seeds sown in 100 percent compost resulted in lower total percent germination, but similar mean days to emergence (MDE), seedling heights, and shoot weights and lower root weights than the control (100 percent peat-lite medium). Media amended with 25, 50 or 75 percent compost resulted in similar total percent emergence, (MDE) and root weights, but taller seedlings with heavier shoots than the control. SPAD-502 chlorophyll meter readings, and leaf N, Ca and Zn contents were higher for seedlings produced in compost amended media than in 100 percent peat-lite medium. The results suggest that compost derived from sugarcane filtercake can be successfully utilized as an amended medium for citrus seedling rootstock production.  相似文献   

13.
Given high mineralization rates of soil organic matter addition of organic fertilizers such as compost and manure is a particularly important component of soil fertility management under irrigated subtropical conditions as in Oman. However, such applications are often accompanied by high leaching and volatilization losses of N. Two experiments were therefore conducted to quantify the effects of additions of activated charcoal and tannin either to compost in the field or directly to the soil. In the compost experiment, activated charcoal and tannins were added to compost made from goat manure and plant material at a rate of either 0.5 t activated charcoal ha?1, 0.8 t tannin extract ha?1, or 0.6 t activated charcoal and tannin ha?1 in a mixed application. Subsequently, emissions of CO2, N2O, and NH3 volatilization were determined for 69 d of composting. The results were verified in a 20‐d soil incubation experiment in which C and N emissions from a soil amended with goat manure (equivalent to 135 kg N ha?1) and additional amendments of either 3 t activated charcoal ha?1, or 2 t tannin extract ha?1, or the sum of both additives were determined. While activated charcoal failed to affect the measured parameters, both experiments showed that peaks of gaseous CO2 and N emission were reduced and/or occurred at different times when tannin was applied to compost and soil. Application of tannins to compost reduced cumulative gaseous C emissions by 40% and of N by 36% compared with the non‐amended compost. Tannins applied directly to the soil reduced emission of N2O by 17% and volatilization of NH3 by 51% compared to the control. However, emissions of all gases increased in compost amended with activated charcoal, and the organic C concentration of the activated charcoal amended soil increased significantly compared to the control. Based on these results, tannins appear to be a promising amendment to reduce gaseous emissions from composts, particularly under subtropical conditions.  相似文献   

14.
A model for nitrogen (N) dynamics in compost‐amended vineyard soils was tested for its predictive power. A soil–mineral N data set from a 3‐year field study on four different vineyard sites was used for model evaluation. The soils were treated with mature bio‐waste compost (30 and 50 Mg ha–1 fresh matter, respectively). The model calculated soil mineral‐N contents at all sites with an overall mean bias error of –2.2 kg N ha–1 for layers of 0.1 m thickness and an overall mean absolute error of 7.4 kg N ha–1 layer–1. Modeling efficiencies for the simulations of the respective treatments ranged from –0.05 to 0.41, and Willmott's Index of Agreement showed values of between 0.41 and 0.81. Acceptable model predictions as defined by the observed variability of mineral‐N contents in the respective soils ranged from 40% to 72%. A strong increase in soil mineral‐N concentration following the compost application at all sites could not be reproduced with the model, thereby reducing the prediction accuracy significantly. The model performance confirms that previously derived N‐mineralization parameters are suitable to describe the N release from soil‐applied mature bio‐waste compost under the environmental conditions of vineyards in Germany.  相似文献   

15.
Reliable and quick methods for measuring nitrogen (N)–supplying capacities of soils (NSC) are a prerequisite for using N fertilizers. This study was conducted to develop a routine method for estimation of mineralizable N in two calcareous soils (sandy loam and clay soils) treated with municipal waste compost or sheep manure. The methods used were anaerobic biological N mineralization, mineral N released by 2 M potassium chloride (KCl), ammonium (NH4 +) N extracted by 1 N sulfuric acid (H2SO4), NH4 +-N extracted by acid potassium permanganate (KMnO4), and NH4 +-N released by oxidation of soil organic matter using acidified potassium permanganate. The results showed that oxidizable N extracted by acid permanganate, a simple and rapid measure of soil N availability, was correlated with results of the anaerobic method. Oxidative 0.05 N KMnO4 was the best method, accounting for 78.4% of variation in NSC. Also, the amount of mineralized N increased with increasing level of organic materials and was greater in clay soil than sandy loam soil.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

The effects of various soil properties on ammonia (NH3) volatilization from soils treated with urea were studied by measuring the NH3 evolved when 20 soils selected to obtain a wide range in properties were incubated at ‐0.034 mPa soil moisture potential and 30°C for 10 days after treatment with urea. The nitrogen (N) volatilized as NH3 from these soils represented from 0 to 65% of the urea‐N applied and averaged 14%. Simple correlation analyses showed that loss of NH3 was negatively correlated (P<0.1%) with cation‐exchange capacity, silt content, and clay content and was positively correlated (P <0.1%) with sand content. Loss of NH3 was also negatively correlated with total nitrogen content (P<1.0%), organic carbon content (P<1.0%), hydrogen ion buffering capacity (P<5.0%), and exchangeable acidity (P<5.0%), and was positively correlated with calcium carbonate equivalent (P <1.0%) and with soil pH after incubation with urea (P<1.0%), but was not significantly correlated with initial soil pH or soil urease activity. Multiple linear regression analyses indicated that the amount of urea N volatilized as NH3 from the 20 soils studied increased with increase in sand content and decreased with increase in cation‐exchange capacity. They also indicated that soil texture and cation‐exchange capacity are better indicators of potential loss of urea N as NH3 from soils fertilized with urea than are hydrogen ion buffering capacity or initial soil pH.  相似文献   

17.
An experiment was conducted to study the effects of polyethylene glycol (PEG) on citrus growth and mineral composition. Seedlings of 7 citrus rootstock cultivars were treated with three osmotic potential levels (‐0.10, ‐0.20, and ‐0.35 MPa) of PEG for five months under greenhouse conditions. Increasing the concentration of PEG in the nutrient solution proportionally reduced root and shoot growth in all rootstocks. Although roots were in direct contact with PEG, their growth was less affected by PEG treatments than that of shoots. Seedling growth was reduced the most in Carrizo citrange and Milam lemon. Significant differences in root and leaf mineral concentrations among cultivars were found under PEG stressed and non stressed conditions. Furthermore, no consistent relationship in mineral absorption, translocation and accumulation seemed to exist between citrus roots and leaves. Root and leaf mineral concentrations were also significantly altered by PEG in all rootstock cultivars. Nitrogen (N), potassium (K), and magnesium (Mg) were reduced in the leaves and calcium (Ca) was reduced in the roots but zinc (Zn) and manganese (Mn) were noticeably increased in the roots. The results of this study demonstrated that some of the deleterious effects of PEG could be attributed to nutritional imbalances, N and Mg deficiency in the leaves and Zn and Mn toxicity in the roots of citrus cultivars.  相似文献   

18.
Mineralization of organic matter and microbial activities in an intensively cultivated acid, N-rich peat soil planted with Salix sp. cv. aquatica were examined for 3 yr. The soil was amended with wood ash or NPK fertilizers providing N as ammonium nitrate or urea. The wood ash amendment (10 tons ha?1) increased soil pH from 4.6 to 5.5 and increased markedly all microbial activities measured, resulting in increased mineralization and N availability, and in loss of 9% total soil N during the first year. The addition of ammonium nitrate caused a corresponding though less pronounced increase in N mineralization. Cellulose decomposition increased in all amended soils, reaching rates 53–86% higher than in non-amended soil. Potential N2 fixation (C2H2 reduction) by free-living organisms was increased by the ash-amendment. Potential denitrification rates were positively correlated (r = 0.98) with the presence of water-soluble organic-C, which was more abundant in ash-amended and non-amended soils than in the soils fertilized with N.  相似文献   

19.
Interactive effects of a combined application of urea and compost on the fates of urea-N and net mineralization of compost-N in three soils with different contents of organic-C and inorganic-N were examined through an aerobic 6-week incubation study. Soils were each subjected to four treatments of urea and compost applied at rates of 0 and 0 mg N kg-1 (control), 115 and 0 mg N kg-1, 0 and 115 mg N kg-1, and 70 and 45 mg N kg-1, respectively. The interactive effects of a combined application of compost and urea on their N transformations varied depending on the contents of indigenous inorganic-N and organic-C in soils. Urea hydrolysis was increased by compost blending only in soils with a relatively low organic-C content. Compost blending increased N immobilization, thus decreasing nitrification of urea-derived N in soils with high organic-C and inorganic-N contents, whereas the reverse was observed in soils with low nutrient contents. Urea blending, by providing inorganic-N, consistently increased net mineralization of compost-N irrespective of soil characteristics, although the increase was much smaller in soil with high indigenous inorganic-N. From the results, it could be concluded that a combined application of chemical fertilizer would improve the compost use efficiency by increasing mineralization of compost-N particularly in soil with a low inorganic-N content. This study also suggests that compost blending would increase immobilization of urea-N in soils with high C and N contents, whereas it would increase nitrification of fertilizer-N in soils with low nutrients contents, thus resulting in increased NO3 - leaching.  相似文献   

20.
A symptom called leaf‐oranging, indicating a deficiency of many nutrients, occurs in paddy rice (Oryzasativa L.) when production expands into some upland soils. Rice (Gui Chou cv.) was grown in culture pots in a flooded, weathered, upland soil (Nacogdoches) and compared to rice growth in a flooded soil currently used for paddy rice production (Dacosta) in Texas to understand the soil and plant factors involved in leaf‐oranging. Fertilizer rates of 0, 10, and 100 mg N/kg as (NH4)2SO4 were applied to each soil along with phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) fertilizer. The orange Leaf Index (OLI), a measure of leaf‐oranging, was determined weekly and increased to 60–70% for plants grown in the upland soil but its progression was delayed by higher N treatments. No leaf‐oranging was observed in the paddy soil. The soil evoking leaf‐oranging was low in silicon (Si) and high in iron (Fe). In addition, analysis of leaves from these plants showed 19–25% higher leaf ammonium‐nitrogen (NH4‐N), 9–137% higher manganese (Mn) levels and lower total N:NH4 concentration compared to normal rice leaves four weeks after transplanting. This inferred that leaf‐oranging probably was associated with some degree of NH4‐N toxicity and antagonism with K. Leaf‐oranging was also associated with low calcium (Ca) assimilation or Ca uptake inhibition because of the heavy Fe‐oxide coating of the roots of the affected rice plants. In this experiment, leaf‐oranging was not associated with toxic levels of Fe or Mn.  相似文献   

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