Abstract

Abstract The effect of five catch crops (ryecorn, ryegrass, mustard, lupin, bean) on nitrogen (N) leaching following the autumn ploughing of a grass ley was compared with N leaching from bare fallow soil. The concentrations of nitrate N and ammonium N in the drainage water and the quantities of drainage water from the various treatments were measured over a winter period using undisturbed soil monolith lysimeters. Nitrate was the dominant form of N leached. The amount of N leached from soils with the ryegrass catch crop (2.5 kg N/ha) was considerably less than that leached from fallow soil (33 kg N/ha). Nitrate concentrations in the drainage water from soils growing ryecorn and ryegrass were less than 10 mg N/litre, whereas that from lysimeters growing lupins or beans and from the fallow soil exceeded this value. Shoot dry matter yield for mustard (5.91 t/ha) and ryecorn (5.25 t/ ha) was at least twice that of the other crops and very much higher than the 0.49 t/ha produced by the weeds in the fallow trea...

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