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1.
More information on the response of newly developed or introduced grain sorghum cultivare to split‐applied nitrogen (N) in semi‐arid rainfed agriculture is needed. Therefore, the influence of four split‐applied N schedules (100/0, 66/34, 50/50, and 34/66) on six American (SC 283, SC 274, SC 669, B 66181, SC 33, and RTam 428), and four West African (CSm 63, 1S 6704c, 1S 7173c, and 1S 7419c) grain sorghum cultivars was evaluated. The split‐applied N significantly increased grain yield and percent protein in grain sorghum over a one‐time application of N. The increase in yield and protein content varied among varieties and schedules of N application. Varieties SC 574, RTam 428, and Csm 63 at split‐applied schedules of 66/34, 50/50, and 34/66, respectively, gave the highest yield over one‐time application of N. Similar differences in percent protein in grain among cultivars due to split‐applied N were observed.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract

An upland rice variety IAC‐47 was grown in a greenhouse to determine the effect of foliar nitrogen (N) supplementation during grain development on the activity of the N assimilation enzymes, nitrate reductase (NR) and glutamine synthetase (GS), on free amino‐N content and leaf soluble sugars, and on grain crude protein content. At 10 and 20 days after anthesis (DAA), the leaves were fertilized with a liquid fertilizer containing 32% N as 12.8% urea, 9.6% ammonium (NH4), and 9.6% nitrate (NO3) in increasing rates corresponding to 0,20+20, 40+40, and 60+60 kg N ha‐1. Leaves were collected twice (at 12 DAA and 14 DAA for GS activity, sugar and amino‐N content, and at 11 and 13 DAA for NRA) after each application of leaf N. The late foliar application of N increased significantly grain crude protein without a corresponding decrease in grain weight. The NR activity (NRA) increased after the foliar application of N. In the flag leaf, 60+60 kg N ha‐1 (21 DAA) resulted in higher NRA (20x over the control), while GS activity was smaller than the control. At 22 DAA there was an increase in GS activity in the flag leaf at 20+20 N level. However, the GS activity decreased as applied N levels increased. Also at the 20+20 level, there were increases in free amino‐N in the flag leaf and second leaf at the final harvest. Throughout the experiment, plants at the 60+60 N level had the lowest levels of soluble sugars. Increases in crude protein were highest at 40+40 N level (27.9%), followed by 60+60 (18.7%).  相似文献   

3.
Abstract

Nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) of N fertilizer can be accurately estimated by tracing the fate of soil applied 15N‐labeling. However, the quantity of N remobilization from non‐kernel components into kernels in maize (Zea mays L.) plants is difficult to determine. A field experiment involving stem infusion with four levels of enriched 15N solution plus non‐infusion or infusion with water was conducted at Ottawa (45°22'N, 75°43'W), Canada to determine the effect of 15N atom % enrichment (a.e.) on physiological processes associated with NUE. At anthesis, 30 mL of 35.7 mmol N solution as 15NH4 15NO3 at 5.0 (N05), 33.0 (N33), 66.0 (N66) and 99.2 (N99) 15N% a.e. was infused into the internode below the primary cob. The control plants were infused with distilled water. Photosynthesis was measured at 2, 4, 6, 24 h and 1 wk after infusion. Plants were sampled and separated into components at 4 d after anthesis (D4A) and at physiological maturity (PM). Dry weight, total N concentration, NH4‐ and NO3‐N, and 15N% a.e. of each component were determined. At D4A, the N33 and N66 treatments resulted in component 15N enrichment similar to that of N99 treatment. At PM, however, only N66 treatment produced results similar to that of N99. None of the infused 15N treatments interfered with ear‐leaf photosynthesis or component NH4‐ and NO3‐N concentrations. Infused 15N was easily moved out of the internode where it was infused, into most components, with the majority in the dominant sinks (cob, husk, and kernels). Nitrogen remobilization in both N66 and N99 treatments accounted for 62% of kernel N. These findings indicate that stem infusion is an appropriate approach to study N remobilization. Based on the concentrations investigated in this study, 66% or higher 15N% a.e. is required for accurate labeling when soil available N is high.  相似文献   

4.
Five field experiments are described which measured the effect of three sources of nitrogen (N) fertilizer, applied at 45 kg N/ha, on the incidence of take‐all and grain yield of wheat. The N fertilizers were ammonium sulphate, ammonium chloride, and sodium nitrate. Compared with the Nil N treatment, ammonium‐nitrogen fertilizer, either as ammonium sulphate (ASdr) or ammonium chloride (ACdr) drilled with the seed, lowered the severity of take‐all. Sodium nitrate topdressed (SNtd) to the soil surface reduced the severity of take‐all in three of five experiments, while ammonium sulphate topdressed (Astd) reduced the severity in four of the five experiments. Ammonium sulphate and ammonium chloride drilled with the seed were equally effective in reducing the severity of take‐all in three of the five experiments. However, ACdr was more effective than ASdr in reducing the severity of take‐all in one experiment whereas ASdr was more effective than ACdr in another experiment. In these two experiments (1 and 5), the effects of the reduction in take‐all severity between the ASdr and ACdr treatments did not affect grain yield. The results suggest that grain yield losses from take‐all are most severe where wheat plants are deficient in N. Chloride containing fertilizers are unlikely to control take‐all disease of wheat on soils of southwestern Australia.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract

In the attempt to find new products which release nutrients in gradual forms, the behavior of two commercial fertilizers was studied, Nitrophoska® (N) and urea (U), covered with two organic materials, humic acid (HA) and alginic acid (AA). The release of nitrogen from the fertilizers was determined by electroultrafiltration (EUF). These applied materials on the fertilizer surface resulted in a slowing of the release of nitrogen, although strictly speaking, these compounds do not function as coated fertilizers. Their effectiveness depends on the fertilizer, for with Nitrophoska®, the addition of alginic acid was more effective, while for urea, the addition of humic acid slowed the release of nitrogen.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract

Nitrogen (N) fertilizer is a key factor of yield increase but also an environmental pollution hazard. The sustainable agriculture system should have an acceptable level of productivity and profitability and an adequate environmental protection. The objectives of this study were to determine the relationships between N rate, DM yield, plant N concentration (NC) and residual soil nitrate‐nitrogen in order to improve the predicted N rate in corn (Zea mays L.) silage. The experiment was conducted over a period of three years in the province of Quebec on three soil series in a continuous corn crop sequence. Treatments consisted of six rates of N: O, 40, 80, 120, 160, and 200 kg N ha‐1 as ammonium nitrate applied at planting: broadcast and side banded. Four optimum N rates were calculated using different models: (i) economic rate base on fertilizer and corn price using the quadratic model (E); (ii) economic rate based on fertilizer and corn price using the quadratic‐plus‐plateau model (QP); (iii) critical rate based on linear‐plus‐plateau model (P); (iv) lower than maximum rate (L) corresponding to 95% of maximum yield. The optimum plant NC at all growing stages and the N uptake at harvest were calculated depending on these N rates and yields.

The NC of whole plant at 8‐leaf stage (25–30 cm plant height) of ear leaf at tasselling and of whole plant at harvest stage, the N rate, the N uptake at harvest and the DM yield were all significantly intercorrelated and affected by soils and years, but not affected by N fertilizer application method. The DM yield was linearly and significantly related to NC of whole plant at 8‐leaf stage (rv = 0.932**). At this stage, the average NC corresponding to the optimum N rate and yield was of 3.71, 3.68, and 3.66% as calculated with E, L, and P model, respectively. Our data suggest that the NC of whole plant at 8‐leaf stage may be used to evaluate the N nutrition status of plant and the required optimum N fertilizer rate. The NC of ear leaf at tassel stage was also significantly correlated to corn yield (r = 0.994**). It may be used as an indicator to evaluate the near‐optimum N rate in the subsequent years.

The N uptake by whole above‐ground plant at harvest was quadratically related to corn yield. Data show that at high fertilizer N rate, the N uptake still increased without significantly increasing yield. The N uptake was of 176.5, 163.0, and 155.0 kg N ha‐1 using the E, L and P rates of 146, 126, and 115 kg N applied ha‐1, respectively. The optimum N rate and yield were affected by soil type and year, but not by the method of N fertilizer application. The yield increased rapidly up to a N rate of about 120 kg N ha‐1 and then quite slightly to a maximum N rate of 192 kg N ha‐1. The optimum N rate was of 115 and 126 kg N ha‐1 using the P and L model respectively and as high as 146.8 kg N ha‐1 using the E model. The L model, using a much smaller N rate, gave a reasonably high yield compared to E rate (12.2 and 12.5 Mg ha‐1, respectively). The data show that a relatively much lower N rate than maximum did not proportionally diminish the yield. Thus, for a difference of 40.4% between maximum N rate and P rate a difference of only 7.4% in yield was observed. Using the L model the differences in rate and yield were of 34.4% and 4.7%, respectively. The QP model gave no significant difference compared to E model.

At harvest the residual soil NO3‐N increased significantly with increasing N fertilizer rate in whole of the 100 cm soil profile, but mainly in the top 40 cm soil layer. The total NO3‐N found in 0–100 cm profile at rate of 0, 120 and 200 kg applied N ha‐1 at planting was as high as 33.7, 60.5, and 74.5 kg N ha‐1 respectively in a light soil and 37.5, 97.5, and 145.5 kg N ha‐1 in a heavy clay soil. The difference in NO3‐N content in the 60–100 cm layer between different applied N rate suggests that at harvest, part of fertilizer N applied at planting was already leached below the 100 cm soil layer. Results, thus, show that reasonably high corn yields can be obtained using more adequate N fertilizer rates which avoid the overfertilization and are likely to reduce the air and ground water pollution.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract

Root‐tip, 1‐cm of Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench cv SC283, SC574, GP‐10, and Funk G522DR were exposed to calcium (45Ca2+) at pH 5.5 for 2‐hr in the presence of nitrate‐nitrogen (NO3?‐N) or ammonium‐nitrogen (NH4+‐N). Nitrate (0.1 mM) induced significantly increased 45Ca uptake in Funk G522DR, SC283, and GP‐10 while 0.01 mM NO3 ?‐N induced significantly increased 45Ca'uptake in SC574, but 45Ca absorption was significantly decreased at 1 mM NO3—N. In the presence of the NH4+ ion, 45Ca uptake was increased up to 8X that of the NH4 +‐N untreated roots. When ammonium chloride (NH4CI) was used, the Cl? tended to induce an increased 45Ca uptake. Cultivar variation was present.  相似文献   

8.
Five field experiments measured the effect of three sources of nitrogen (N) fertilizer, applied at 45 kg N/ha, on the incidence of take‐all and grain yield of wheat. The N fertilizers were ammonium sulphate, ammonium chloride and sodium nitrate. Compared with the nil N treatment, ammonium nitrogen fertilizer, either as ammonium sulphate (ASdr) or ammonium chloride (ACdr) drilled with the seed, lowered the severity of take‐all. Sodium nitrate topdressed (SNtd) to the soil surface reduced the severity of take‐all in three of the five experiments, while ammonium sulphate topdressed (AStd) reduced the severity in four experiments. Ammonium sulphate and ammonium chloride drilled with the seed were equally effective in reducing the severity of take‐all in three of the five experiments. However, ACdr was more effective than ASdr in reducing the severity of take‐all in one experiment, whereas ASdr was more effective than ACdr in another experiment. In experiments 1 and 5, the reduction in take‐all severity between the ASdr and ACdr treatments did not affect grain yield. Results suggested that grain yield losses from take‐all are most severe where wheat plants are deficient in N. Fertilizers containing chloride are unlikely to control take‐all disease of wheat on soils of southwestern Australia.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract

Wheel‐traffic induced soil compaction has been shown to limit crop productivity, and its interaction with tillage method could affect soil nutrient transformations. A study was conducted during 1993–1994 to determine interactive effects of tillage method (conventional tillage and no‐tillage) and wheel‐traffic (traffic and no traffic) on soil carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) at a long‐term (initiated 1987) research site at Shorter, Alabama. The cropping system at this study site is a corn (Zea mays L.) ‐ soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr] rotation with crimson clover (Trifolium incarnatum L.) as a winter cover crop. Soil organic C, total N, and microbial biomass carbon (MBC) were not significantly affected by six years of traffic and tillage treatments. However, conventional tillage compared to no‐tillage almost doubled the amount of CO2‐C respired over the entire observation period and during April 1994 field operations. Soil respiration was stimulated immediately after application of wheel‐ traffic, but nontrafficked soils produced greater amounts of CO2‐C compared to trafficked soils during other periods of observation. Nitrogen mineralization was significantly lower from no‐tillage‐trafficked soils compared to conventional tillage‐trafficked and no‐tillage‐nontrafficked soils for the 1993 growing season. A laboratory incubation indicated the presence of relatively easily mineralizable N substrates from conventional tillage‐trafficked soil compared to conventional tillage‐nontrafficked and no‐till‐trafficked soils. For the coarse textured soil used in this study it appears that conventional tillage in combination with wheel‐traffic may promote the highest levels of soil microbial activity.  相似文献   

10.
The partitioning of biomass between aboveground parts and roots, and between vegetative and reproductive plant parts plays a major role in determining the ability of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) to produce a crop in a given environment. We evaluated the single and combined effects of water and N supply on the partitioning of biomass in cotton plants exposed to two N supply levels, 0 and 12 mM of N, and two water regimes, well irrigated and water‐stressed at an early reproductive stage. The N treatments began when the third true leaf was visible, while water deficit treatments were imposed over the N treatments when the plants were transferred into controlled‐environment chambers at a leaf area near 0.05 m2. Both water deficits and N deficits inhibited total biomass accumulation and its partitioning in cotton. Water deficit alone and N deficit alone inhibited the growth of leaves, petioles, and branches, but did not inhibit growth of the stem and enhanced the accumulation of biomass in squares. When water deficit was superimposed on N deficit, leaf growth was inhibited, although to a lesser extent than when it was the sole stress factor, and the accumulation of biomass in squares was also inhibited. Yet, the dry weight of squares in plants exposed to water and N deficits was greater than that of non‐stressed plants. Water and N deficits, either alone or in combination, did not inhibit the growth of the tap root. Growth of lateral roots was not inhibited either by water deficit alone or in combination with N deficit, but was enhanced when plants were exposed to N deficit alone. Exposure to water deficit alone or in combination with N deficit decreased the shoot:root ratio through the inhibition of shoot growth. Exposure to N deficit alone decreased the shoot:root ratio through the combination of shoot growth inhibition and root growth enhancement.  相似文献   

11.
Previous studies have indicated that under hydroponic conditions, spring wheat (Triticum aestivum) plants produce higher grain yields, more tillers, and increased dry matter when continuously supplied with mixtures of NO3 and NH4 than when supplied with only NO3. The objective of this study was to determine if mixed N needs to be available before or after flowering, or continuously, in order to elicit increases in growth and yield of wheat. During vegetative development, plants of the cultivar ‘Marshal’ were grown in one of two nutrient solutions containing either a 100/0 or 50/50 mixture of NO3 to NH4 and, after flowering, half the plants were switched to the other solution. At physiological maturity, plants were harvested, separated into leaves, stems, roots, and grain and the dry matter and N concentration of each part determined. Yield components and the number of productive tillers were also determined. Availability of mixed N at either growth stage increased grain yield over plants receiving continuous NO3, but the increase was twice as large when the mixture was present during vegetative growth. When the N mixture was available only during vegetative growth the yield increase was similar to that obtained with continuous mixed N. The yield increases obtained with mixed N were the result of enhanced tillering and the production of more total biomass. Although plants receiving a mixed N treatment accumulated more total N than those grown solely with NO3, the greatest increase occurred when mixed N was available during vegetative growth. Because availability of mixed N after flowering increased the N concentration over all NO3 and pre‐flowering mixed N plants, it appears that the additional N accumulation from mixed N needs to be coupled with tiller development in order to enhance grain yields. These results confirm that mixed N nutrition increases yield of wheat and indicate that the most critical growth stage to supply the N mixture to the plant is during vegetative growth.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract

Excessive use of nitrogen (N) fertilizers in wheat fields has led to elevated NO3-N concentrations in groundwater and reduced N use efficiency. Three-year field and 15N tracing experiments were conducted to investigate the effects of N application rates on N uptake from basal and topdressing 15N, N use efficiency, and grain yield in winter wheat plants; and determine the dynamics of N derived from both basal and topdressing 15N in soil in high-yielding fields. The results showed that 69.5–84.5% of N accumulated in wheat plants derived from soil, while 6.0–12.5%and 9.2–18.1% derived from basal 15N and top 15N fertilizer, respectively. The basal N fertilizer recovery averaged 33.9% in plants, residual averaged 59.2% in 0–200 cm depth soil; the topdressing N fertilizer recovery averaged 50.5% in plants, residual averaged 48.2% in 0–200 cm soil. More top 15N was accumulated in plants and more remained in 0–100 cm soil rather than in 100–200 cm soil at maturity, compared with the basal 15N. However, during the period from pre-sowing to pre-wintering, the soil nitrate moved down to deeper layers, and most accumulated in the layers below 140 cm. With an increase of N fertilizer rate, the proportion of the N derived from soil in plants decreased, but that derived from basal and topdressing fertilizer increased; the proportion of basal and top 15N recovery in plants decreased, and that of residual in soil increased. A moderate application rate of 96–168 kg N ha?1 led to increases in nitrate content in 0–60 cm soil layer, N uptake amount, grain yield and apparent recovery fraction of applied fertilizer N in wheat. Applying above 240 kg N ha?1 promoted the downward movement of basal and top 15N and soil nitrate, but had no significant effect on N uptake amount; the excessive N application also obviously decreased the grain yield, N uptake efficiency, apparent recovery fraction of applied fertilizer N, physiological efficiency and internal N use efficiency. It is suggested that the appropriate application rate of nitrogen on a high-yielding wheat field was 96–168 kg N ha?1.  相似文献   

13.
It may be desirable to minimize dinitrogen (N2) fixation in alfalfa (Medicago saliva L.) when a source of inorganic nitrogen (N), such as manure, is readily available. Our objectives were to determine the N2 fixation response of eight alfalfa germplasms to inorganic N and to characterize plant‐to‐plant variation for this trait. Seed was sown in vermiculite and irrigated with nutrient solution in growth chambers. Herbage was removed at 71 d and treatments of 1, 3, 5, or 10 mM N were applied as 15N‐depleted ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3). After 34 d of regrowth, herbage was removed and analyzed for dry mass, total N concentration, and N isotope ratio. Increased availability of inorganic N resulted in a linear increase in herbage weight, height, shoot number, and N concentration, and consistently decreased N2 fixation for all germplasms. Estimated N2 fixation was greater than zero at the highest rate of inorganic N, which we speculate was due, in part, to remobilized root and crown N, because nodules appeared to be nonfunctional. Across all treatments, N2 fixation correlated best with herbage N concentration, but there was no relationship between these variables within a given N treatment concentration. Significant variation in reliance on N2 fixation in the presence of inorganic N existed in all eight germplasms.  相似文献   

14.
In a field experiment with wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), the effect of the percentage severity of take‐all on the production of dried tops and grain and the kernel weight (mg/seed) was measured when different amounts of phosphorus (P) fertiliser were applied. The soil was severely P deficient. The amounts of P fertitiser varied from nil P (deficient) to 40 kg P/ha (adequate) applied annually. The levels of Gaeumannomyces graminis tritici (Ggt) were generated by four cropping sequences. The levels of percent severity of Ggt on plant roots ranged from low (<10% of wheat plant roots infected) to high (70% of roots infected by Ggt). Yield of dried tops, grain, and kernal weight, all increased as the level of P applied increased, but the amount of Ggt infection decreased. No grain was produced where no P was applied. The percentage increase in yield due to declines in the severity of take‐all was greater as the level of P applied increased. Increasing levels of P fertiliser help control the severity of Ggt (%) only where the initial level of Ggt with nil P fertiliser are moderate to low. Where the levels of Ggt severity are >65% the effectiveness of P in reducing the levels of Ggt severity rapidly declined. The percentage severity of Ggt affected the efficiency of plants to use P fertilisers. For each cropping sequence, a Mitscherlich function described the grain yield response to P fertiliser. The maximum grain yield (A coefficient) and the curvature coefficient (C) both declined with increases in the level of Ggt severity (%). For example, the C was significantly reduced from 0.134±0.03 for the least Ggt severity (%) to 0.00446±0.001 where Ggt was not controlled. The kernal weight (mg/seed) was increased by P application and decreased by Ggt infection.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract

Field experiments with barley were conducted on stubble of cereal grains in northcentral and central Alberta to determine the effect of N rate (25, 50, and 100 kg N/ha) on yield, N recovery and the relative efficiency (RE) of fall versus spring application of incorporated urea to barley. In most instances fall‐applied N was inferior to spring‐applied N and there were large differences in yield and N uptake of barley grain between fall‐ and spring‐applied N. The differences generally increased with increasing N rate for yield and N uptake, but decreased substantially for N use efficiency and % N recovery. As the N rate increased from 25 to 100 kg N/ha average RE of fall‐ versus spring‐applied N increased from 47 to 73% for yield increase and from 42 to 69% for N recovery. The increased RE with increasing N rate did not imply that the greatest level of N reduced the quantity of over‐winter N loss. Instead the results indicated that a lower proportion of the yield or N uptake was lost from fall application when the greatest rate of N was applied.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

By restricted access to manure, nitrogen (N) supply in organic agriculture relies on biological N-fixation. This study compares grain yields after one full-season green manure (FSGM) to yields with repeated use of a green-manure catch crop. At two sites in south-eastern Norway, in a simple 4-year rotation (oats/wheat/oats/wheat), the repeated use of ryegrass, clover, or a mixture of ryegrass and clover as catch crops was compared with an FSGM established as a catch crop in year 1. The FSGM treatments had no subsequent catch crops. In year 5, the final residual effects were measured in barley.

The yield levels were about equal for grains with no catch crop and a ryegrass catch crop. On average, the green-manure catch crops increased subsequent cereal yields close to 30%. The FSGM increased subsequent cereal yields significantly in two years, but across the rotation the yields were comparable to those of the treatments without green-manure catch crop. To achieve acceptable yields under Norwegian conditions, more than 25% of the land should be used for full-season green manure, or this method combined with green-manure catch crops. The accumulated amount of N in aboveground biomass in late autumn did not compensate for the N removed by cereal yields. To account for the deficiency, the roots of the green-manure catch crops would have to contain about 60% of the total N (tot-N) required to balance the cereal yields. Such high average values for root N are likely not realistic to achieve. However, measurement of biomass in late autumn may not reflect all N made available to concurrent or subsequent main crops.  相似文献   

17.
Field experiments were carried out to study the effect of different seed‐zinc (Zn) content on grain yield and grain Zn concentration in a bread wheat cultivar Atay 85 grown in a severely Zn‐deficient soil under rainfed and irrigated conditions for two years. Three groups of seeds with Zn contents of 355, 800, and 1,465 ng Zn seed‐1 were obtained through different number of foliar applications of ZnSO4.7H2O in the previous crop year. Experiments were carried out with 23 kg Zn ha‐1 (as ZnSO4.7H2O) and without Zn fertilization to the soil. Grain yield from seeds with 800 and 1,465 ng Zn seed‐1 content was significantly higher than that from low seed‐Zn, especially under rainfed conditions. In the first year, under rainfed and Zn‐deficient conditions, yield of plants grown from the highest seed‐Zn content was 116% higher than the yield of plants grown from the low seed‐Zn content. However, in the first year soil‐Zn application combined with low‐Zn seed resulted in a yield increase of 466% compared to nill Zn treatment with low‐Zn seed, indicating that higher seed‐Zn contents could not compensate for the effects of soil Zn application. Soil Zn application significantly increased Zn concentrations in shoot and grain. However, the effect of different seed Zn contents on Zn concentrations of plants was not significant, probably due to the dilution of Zn in tissues resulting from enhanced dry matter production. The results presented show that wheat plants grown from seed with high Zn content can achieve higher grain yields than those grown from the low‐Zn seed when Zn was not applied to the soil. Therefore, sowing seeds with higher Zn contents can be considered a practical solution to alleviate Zn deficiency problem, especially under rainfed conditions in spite of it being insufficient to completely overcome the problem.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract

The extraction of a field‐moist soil with DTPA will result in a level of extractable iron (Fe) lower than that of the air‐dried soil. Soil gas‐phase carbon dioxide (CO2) levels may be considerably higher than ambient atmospheric levels, especially in wet soils in the field. This study was undertaken to determine whether gas‐phase CO2 level influences the quantity of Fe extracted by DTPA. Three moist calcareous soils were incubated for 21 days, each at three different partial pressures of CO2, after which the moist soils were extracted with DTPA. A sample of each soil was also air dried, and was subsequently extracted with DTPA. In each case, DTPA‐extractable Fe from the moist sample was lower than that from the air‐dried sample; however, DTPA‐extractable Fe increased with increasing CO2 partial pressure of in the moist soils. DTPA‐extractable Fe concentration for a given soil following air drying was not significantly influenced by the CO2 partial pressure during incubation of the originally field‐moist soil. DTPA‐extract pH of the moist soils followed the same trend as soil‐solution pH (i.e., as CO2 concentration of the soil gas‐phase increased, soil solution pH and DTPA extract pH both decreased); however, the slope of the pH versus log PCO2 curve was less pronounced in the DTPA extract due to the buffering capacity of the triethanolamine. From this study, it is concluded that elevated soil gas‐phase CO2 partial pressure does not contribute to the lower level of DTPA‐extractable Fe observed when the extraction is performed on a field‐moist versus an air‐dried soil; increased CO2 partial pressure actually resulted in a slight increase in concentration of DTPA‐extractable Fe obtained from a field‐moist soil.  相似文献   

19.
Effects of varied irrigation and zinc (Zn) fertilization (0, 7, 14, 21 kg Zn ha‐1 as ZnSO47.H2O) on grain yield and concentration and content of Zn were studied in two bread wheat (Triticum aestivum), two durum wheat (Triticum durum), two barley (Hordeum vulgare), two triticale (xTriticosecale Wittmark), one rye (Secale cereale), and one oat (Avena sativa) cultivars grown in a Zn‐deficient soil (DTPA‐extractable Zn: 0.09 mg kg‐1) under rainfed and irrigated field conditions. Only minor or no yield reduction occurred in rye as a result of Zn deficiency. The highest reduction in plant growth and grain yield due to Zn deficiency was observed in durum wheats, followed by oat, barley, bread wheat and triticale. These decreases in yield due to Zn deficiency became more pronounced under rainfed conditions. Although highly significant differences in grain yield were found between treatments with and without Zn, no significant difference was obtained between the Zn doses applied (7–21 kg ha‐1), indicating that 7 kg Zn ha‐1 would be sufficient to overcome Zn deficiency. Increasing doses of Zn application resulted in significant increases in concentration and content of Zn in shoot and grain. The sensitivity of various cereals to Zn deficiency was different and closely related to Zn content in the shoot but not to Zn amount per unit dry weight. Irrigation was effective in increasing both shoot Zn content and Zn efficiency of cultivars. The results demonstrate the existence of a large genotypic variation in Zn efficiency among and within cereals and suggest that plants become more sensitive to Zn deficiency under rainfed than irrigated conditions.  相似文献   

20.
The oldest still existing long‐term field experiments in Czech Republic were founded in 1955. In Prague Ruzyné, there are five of nine experiments founded by ?karda. Data of two of these experiments (Block III and Block B) were used to evaluate the carbon and nitrogen cycles in time period 1966–1997. These two experiments have a similar design. They differ in the crop rotation. Four variants of organic and mineral fertilisation, receiving similar doses of fertilisers, have been selected. The same was calculated for the same time period for a mini‐plot bare fallow field experiment founded in 1958 by Novák.

The results of these experiments conducted in one locality (the same soil and climatic conditions) show the effect of the cultivated crops on the carbon and nitrogen cycles (comparing bare fallow experiment with the cropped ones), the effect of organic and mineral fertilisation (among all experiments), and the effect of crop rotation (comparing Block III to Block B) on these cycles.  相似文献   

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