Abstract

AbstractNitrogen losses were measured in water draining from cut permanent grass swards growing in monolith lysimeters containing clay loam (Salop series) or silt loam (Bromyard series) soils. The swards were cut at 6‐week intervals during the summer and were fertilised with calcium nitrate at rates of 0 and 400 kg N ha−1 in each of five successive years (1977–81); in the first year the fertiliser was labelled with 15N. Four differing rainfall regimes were imposed from spring to autumn in each year. Mean annual losses of nitrogen by leaching from unfertilised swards were 3.8 kg N ha−1 with mean nitrate‐N concentrations in the water of about 1 mg N litre−1. In fertilised lysimeters where rainfall distribution was that of the long‐term average the mean annual total nitrogen losses were 41 kg N ha−1 in the Salop soil and 15 kg N ha−1 for the Bromyard soil; mean nitrate‐N concentrations were 11.6 mg N litre−1 and 5.1 mg N litre−1, respectively. Losses of nitrogen and nitrate concentrations were similar to these quantities when irrigation increased the rainfall total to 120% of average. Where a drought was imposed for 2 weeks before and after each cut, mean nitrate‐N concentrations increased to 20.3 mg N litre−1 on Salop soil and 13.1 mg N litre−1 on Bromyard soils; total annual nitrogen losses were 74 kg N ha and 33 kg N ha−1, respectively. The largest losses were recorded when the drought period extended for four weeks before each cut and mean nitrate‐N concentrations increases to 28.8 mg N litre−1 on Salop soil and 34 mg N litre−1 on Bromyard soil, with total annual nitrogen losses of 104 kg N ha−1 and 109 kg N ha−1, respectively. Losses of nitrogen derived from the fertiliser labelled with 15N were 7.3–8.4% of that applied in the Salop soil (29–33 kg N ha−1), with little effect by the differing rainfall distributions. On the Bromyard soil, losses were 3.7% (14 kg N ha−1) of the applied fertiliser in lysimeters not subjected to droughts. When the period of the drought extended before and after each cut, losses were 8.2% (32 kg N ha−1) and increased to 17.9% (70 kg N ha−1) when the drought period occurred entirely before each cut. Fertiliser nitrogen contributed 48–69% of the total nitrogen in drainage water from both soils in the first year.

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