Abstract

There is increasing interest in the soil's dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) fraction. However, soil analytical procedures have to be such that the result is a true representation of the DON levels in the soil. Three separate studies investigated the effects of soil and extract preparation on measured soil mineral N (Nmin) and DON concentrations in agricultural soils, ranging in texture from sands to clays. In Study 1 (18 soils), storing soils fresh or freeze/thawing, extracting with 2 M KCl or distilled water and storing extracts fresh or frozen were all tested. Study 2 (60 soils) retested soil storage (fresh vs. frozen) and extractant (2 M KCl or distilled water). Study 3 compared water and 0.01 M CaCl2 as extractants. Average Nmin values (KCl) were 13.2 and 4.5 mg kg−1 dry soil in Studies 1 and 2. Average DON values (water) were 3.3 and 3.7 mg kg−1 dry soil, respectively. Both 2 M KCl or 0.01 M CaCl2 extracted more DON from soils than did water. We suggest water extracts give a more reliable estimate of true DON status. However, a practical difficulty was obtaining a clear extract due to deflocculation of clay in the water extract. Freezing soils or extracts before analysis affected measured DON values, with a statistically significant tendency for DON to decrease depending on the extractant used.

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