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Fate of 15N-labelled nitrogen fertilizer applied to kiwifruit (Actinidia deliciosa) vines
Authors:S F Ledgard  G S Smith
Institution:(1) N.Z. Pastoral Agriculture Research Institute Ltd., Ruakura Agricultural Centre, Private Bag 3123, Hamilton, New Zealand;(2) Horticulture and Food Research Institute of N.Z. Ltd., Ruakura Agricultural Centre, Private Bag 3123, Hamilton, New Zealand
Abstract:The fate of 15N-labelled ammonium fertilizer applied once to six-year-old field-grown kiwifruit (Actinidia deliciosa lsquoHaywardrsquo) vines was measured over three years. The three main treatments were nitrogen (N) applied singularly at 100 or 200 kg N ha–1 in early spring (two weeks before bud burst) or split with 100 kg N ha–1 (unlabelled) in early spring and 100 kg N ha–1 (15N-labelled) ten weeks later. All N treatments were applied to vines with a history of either 50 or 200 kg N ha–1 yr–1. For three years after 15n application, components of the vines and soil (0–600 mm depth) were sampled at harvest in late autumn and the N and 15N contents determined.By the first harvest, all plant uptake of 15N had occurred and this represented 48–53% of the 15N applied. There was no significant effect of current N fertilizer treatment or of N history on 15N recovery by vines. Removal of 15N in harvested fruit was small at 5–6% in the first year and 8% over 3 years. After 2–3 years, most plant 15N occurred in the roots and this component declined only slowly over time. In contrast, there was a large temporal decline in 15N in above-ground plant components due to the annual lsquoremovalrsquo in leaf fall and pruning. An associated experiment showed that when 15N-labelled prunings and leaves were mulched and returned to the soil, only about 9% was recovered by plants within 2 years. Almost all remaining mulched material had been immobilised into the soil organic N.In all treatments, about 20% of the added 15N remained in soil at the first harvest. This was almost entirely in organic fractions (<0.4% in inorganic N) and mostly in the surface 150-mm layer. The 15N content in soil changed little over time (from 20 to 17% between the first and third harvests respectively) and indicated that most of the N had been immobilised into stable humus forms.
Keywords:ammonium  field  kiwifruit  15N  nitrogen fertilizer  recovery  soil nitrogen
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