Abstract

The objective of this work was to investigate the usefulness of near infrared (NIR) reflectance spectroscopy in determining: (i) various constituents (total N, total C, active N, biomass and mineralisable N, and pH), (ii) parameters (soil source, depth from which sample was obtained, type of tillage used) and (iii) rate of application of NH4NO3 fertiliser) of low organic matter soils. A NIRSystems model 6250 spectrometer was used to scan soil samples ( n = 179) obtained from experimental plots at two locations with three replicate plots under plow and no till practices at each location with three rates of NH4NO3 for each plot (2 × 3 × 2 × 3). For each of these, samples were taken from five depths for a total of 2 × 3 × 2 × 3 × 5 or 180 samples (one sample lost). The results demonstrated that NIR reflectance spectroscopy can be successfully used to determine some compositional parameters of low organic matter soils (particularly total C and total N). It is also apparent that for non-biological parameters (excluding soil type as reflected by source) such as the depth from which the sample was obtained, the rate of application of NH4NO3 fertiliser and the form of tillage used, that NIR reflectance spectroscopy is not very useful, unless a very limited set of samples is used (i.e. single tillage and location). For other determinations, such as pH, biomass N and active N, the results may be useful depending on the exact needs in question. Finally, from the results presented here, NIR reflectance spectroscopy was not successful in determining soil N mineralisable in 21 days.

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