Abstract

Summary Recent intensification of cropping and the attendant longer submergence of the soil for lowland rice in tropical Asia appear to have altered the nature of the soil organic matter, and perhaps also nutrient cycling. To identify the dominant forms of organic nitrogen in the soils we extracted the labile mobile humic acid (MHA) and the more recalcitrant calcium humate (CaHA) fractions from soils under several long-term field experiments in the Philippines and analysed them by 15N-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Amide N dominated the spectra of all humic acid (HA) samples (60–80% of total peak area). Its proportion of total spectral area increased with increasing intensity of cropping and length of time during which the soil was flooded and was greater in the MHA fraction than in the CaHA fraction. Simultaneously the spectral proportion of free amino N and other chemical shift regions decreased slightly with increasing length of submergence. Heterocyclic N was detected at modest proportions (7–22%) and was more prevalent in more humified samples, especially in the CaHA of aerated soils. Correlations of spectral proportions of heterocyclic N with other properties of the HA, reported elsewhere, were highly significant. Correlations were positive with visible light absorption (r= 0.86) and concentration of free radicals (r= 0.85), both of which are indices of humification, and negative with concentration of H (r= −0.86), a negative index of humification. Correlations of spectral proportions of amide N with these properties were also highly significant but in each case of opposite sign to that of heterocyclic N. Proportions of heterocyclic N declined with increasing duration of submergence. The results suggest that (i) 15N-NMR can reproducibly measure some portion of heterocyclic N, (ii) formation of heterocyclic N is associated solely with gradual humification occurring over many years, and (iii) the abundant phenols in the submerged rice soils did not promote formation of heterocyclic N, and hence some other process is responsible for a substantial decrease in the availability of native N associated with intensive rice cropping.

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