Abstract

Abstract Lime application to acid soils usually increases N mineralization but little is known about how it affects the N determined by methods that assess organic N availability. One incubation and three chemical methods were compared in twenty samples of unlimed or limed soils in a pot experiment with maize (Zea mays, L). The N availability methods included the NH4 +‐N released from soils by: a) anaerobic incubation for 7 days at 40°C; b) 2 mol/L KC1 at 100°C for 4 hours and distilled with MgO (hot KCl); c) this same procedure but distilled with 5 mol/L NaOH (hot KCl‐NaOH); and d) 30% v/v H2O2 and MnO2. In addition, inorganic N, total N and organic C were also determined in the soil samples. Readily available inorganic N presented the highest correlation coefficient with N uptake by maize but anaerobic incubation, hot KCl, hot KCl‐NaOH, and total N were also good predictors of soil N availability. The H2O2/MnO2 procedure and organic C produced inconsistent results. The amounts of N extracted by the meth...

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