Short-term consequences of spatial heterogeneity in soil nitrogen concentrations caused by urine patches of different sizes |
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Authors: | K.H. Orwin, J.E. Bertram, T.J. Clough, L.M. Condron, R.R. Sherlock,M. O Callaghan |
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Affiliation: | aLancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, LA1 4YQ, United Kingdom;bAgriculture and Life Sciences Division, PO Box 84, Lincoln University, Lincoln 7647, New Zealand;cAgResearch, Private Bag 4749, Lincoln 7647, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | The scale of spatial heterogeneity in soil nitrogen (N) concentrations varies considerably in grazed systems, because grazers vary in the volume of urine they excrete. This could affect how urine-N is processed, and subsequently how much N is lost from the system, as diffusion and plant effects on soil nutrient concentrations can be scale-dependent. Two field experiments were performed; one measured the impact of urine patch size (small, medium or large) on soil inorganic N pools and fluxes over time, and the other assessed whether urine patch size affected plant responses and system N retention even if the same total amount of urine was applied. Soil from inside small urine patches retained inorganic N for shorter amounts of time, resulting in lower plant biomass and N uptake than that inside larger patches. Although system nitrogen retention was not affected by patch size, it appeared that larger patches had a greater potential to lose N due to the longer period over which soil inorganic N concentrations remained high. This suggests that systems grazed by larger organisms are more prone to lose N through patch size effects than those grazed by smaller ones. |
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Keywords: | Urine N cycling Heterogeneity Grazing Scale |
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