Abstract: | In a greenhouse experiment, the response of three cultivars of rice to N application was studied at two root-zone moisture regimes. The response was measured in terms of dry matter yield, uptake of N from applied fertilizer and soil organic matter, loss of fertilizer N, and interaction of applied N with the native soil N. Nitrogen was applied as 15N-labelled ammonium sulphate and two temperature regimes in the root-zone were established by digging one set of pots into the soil, while keeping the other set on the surface. This setup created and maintained a temperature difference of 5–7°C in the rhizosphere, temperature being lower in the buried pots throughout the growth period. The rice cultivars included a coarse-grain and high-yielding cultivar (IR-6) and two aromatic fine-grain cultivars (Bas-198 and Bas-Pak). IR-6 showed a negative response to higher root-zone temperature with resultant reduced efficiency of soil N and fertilizer N. The other two cultivars were relatively insensitive. The effect of temperature was more pronounced for N yield than dry matter accumulation. Loss of applied N occurred in all cases, but it was more pronounced in IR-6 at the higher temperature regime. Application of labelled fertilizer N led to an increase in the uptake of unlabelled N due to a real "added nitrogen interaction" which was attributed mainly to an increase in root biomass. |