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Impact of urease and nitrification inhibitor on NH4+ and NO3− dynamic in soil after urea spring application under field conditions evaluated by soil extraction and soil solution sampling
Authors:Tobias Kirschke  Oliver Spott  Doris Vetterlein
Abstract:The application of mineral nitrogen (N) fertilizers is one of the most important management tools to ensure and increase yield in agricultural systems. However, N fertilization can lead to various ecological problems such as nitrate (urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0003) leaching or ammonia and nitrous oxide emissions. The application of N stabilizers (i.e., inhibitors) combined with urea fertilization offers an effective option to reduce or even prevent N losses due to their regulatory effect on ammonium (urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0004) and urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0005 release into the soil. The present field experiment therefore aimed at soil N speciation dynamics after urea spring fertilization (225 kg N ha?1) in the presence of a urease inhibitor (UI), a nitrification inhibitor (NI), both inhibitors (UI+NI) or when no inhibitor was applied at all. The study focused on the distribution of N species among soil matrix and soil solution. Plant cultivation was completely omitted in order to avoid masking soil N turnover and speciation by plant N uptake and growth dynamics. Application of UI clearly delayed urea hydrolysis in the top soil, but a complete hydrolysis of urea took place within only 10 days after fertilization (DAF). Nitrification was significantly reduced by NI application, leading to higher urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0006 and lower urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0007 concentrations in treatments with NI. Due to sorption of urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0008 to the soil matrix a significantly larger fraction of urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0009 was always detected in the soil extracts compared to soil solution. However, while in soil extracts the impact of NI application was less apparent and delayed, in soil solution a quick response to NI application was observed as revealed by significantly increased soil solution concentrations of urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0010. Because of the “asymmetric” soil phase distribution soil solution urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0011 was predominant over urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0012 only initially after fertilization even in inhibitor treatments (≈ 8 to 10 DAF). Nevertheless, inhibitor application tended towards closer ratios of urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0013 to urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0014 concentration in soil solution and hence, might additionally affect concentration dependent processes like plant N uptake and root development. Despite cold spring conditions urea application along with UI and/or NI did not indicate a limited supply of plant available urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0015 and urn:x-wiley:14368730:media:jpln201800513-math-0016.
Keywords:ammonium sorption isotherm  N speciation  nitrification inhibitor  soil nitrogen  urease inhibitor
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