Tracer studies on nitrogen immobilization-mineralization relationships in forest raw humus |
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Authors: | L. N. Overrein |
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Affiliation: | (1) The Norwegian Forest Research Institute, Vollebekk, Norway |
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Abstract: | Summary An investigation was conducted to study the effect of fertilizer-N, application rate, and incubation temperature on the immobilization-mineralization relationships of N in forest raw humus. Urea, ammonium chloride, and potassium nitrate enriched with N15 were used at rates of 0, 50, 100, 200, and 400 ppm N. During a 60 days' experimental period the soil was incubated at 12° and 20°C. The interchanges of N added to this highly acid humus material are to a great extent found to be governed by the N-carrier itself. The total recovery in the N15 inorganic pool at the end of the 60 days' period, increased with increasing fertilizer application rate regardless of the source of N added. With one exception only, the recovery of KCl-extractable N15 was larger in the ammonium treatment than in the urea-treated humus. The more striking differences between the interchanges of N15 in the urea and the ammonium treatments, as compared with the nitrate-treated humus, are revealed in the extremely high recovery of KCl-extractable N, and a concomitant low recovery of the added N in the non-extractable pool in the nitrate treatment. The immobilization and re-mineralization of N are found to be positively correlated with temperature. The total recovery of N15 was high in the nitrate treatment, and even higher in the ammonium-treated soil (96 to 104 per cent). However, the unaccounted-for losses reached a maximum of about 48 per cent of the added N at 20°C in the 400 ppm urea-N treatment. The results are consistent in showing a statistically highly significant effect of N-fertilizer, application rate, and temperature on the net mineralization of humus N. The release of soil N is discussed in relation to the highly significant two- and three-way interactions between the above-mentioned main variables. Contribution from the Forest Soil Fertilization Research Group, Vollebekk, Norway. This work was supported by the Agricultural Research Council of Norway. |
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