Abstract

Laboratory studies have shown that N availability may affect C decomposition in soils. A field study was undertaken to determine to what extent water-soluble organic C (WSOC) and C mineralization could be affected by mineral N fertilizers. Soil cores were collected in the 1993 and 1994 growing seasons, from a sandy loam (loamy, mixed, frigid, Typic Haplorthod) and a sandy clay (fine, mixed, frigid, Typic Humaquept) under early-maturing maize ( Zea mays L.). Soils were fertilized with NH 4NO 3 at reduced (10, 60, 120 kg N ha −1) or recommended (180 kg N ha −1) rates. For both soils, C mineralization rate increased significantly ( P<0.05) with amount of N fertilizer only at two of the nine sampling dates. However, WSOC contents generally decreased ( P<0.05) with increasing N fertilizer rate. Overall, a decrease in soil mineral N content was consistently associated with an increase in WSOC content. The relationship between soil WSOC and mineral N contents was logarithmic for both soils ( r 2=0.70 in the sandy loam and r 2=0.89 in the sandy clay). For both soils, we estimated a critical level of N of about 60 mg kg −1, below which small decreases in mineral N were associated with large increases in WSOC contents.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call