Effects of chemical composition on nitrogen mineralization from green manures of seven tropical leguminous trees |
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Authors: | Karen A. Oglesby James H. Fownes |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Agronomy and Soil Science, University of Hawaii, 1910 East-West Rd., 96822 Honolulu, HI, USA;(2) Present address: Save the Children, P.O. Box 281, Thimphu, Bhutan |
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Abstract: | Green manures from seven tropical leguminous trees were incubated with soil to determine the rates and controls of net nitrogen release. Fresh green manure (leaves and succulent twigs) was mixed with moist soil and incubated in polyethylene bags. Net N mineralization from green manures was estimated by the accumulation of extractable ammonium and nitrate minus the accumulation in soil alone. Patterns of N mineralization were complex, differed among species, and at 12 weeks ranged from 10 to 65 percent of original green-manure N. Cumulative net N mineralization was negatively correlated with initial soluble polyphenol content in the early phases of decomposition (1 through 8 weeks) and with initial lignin content in later phases (4 through 12 weeks). Neither initial percent N nor lignin: N ratio were strongly correlated with N mineralization. The best chemical index of N release was the initial polyphenol: N ratio. This study confirms previous findings that N mineralization from tropical legumes is controlled more by soluble polyphenols than by lignin or N content. |
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Keywords: | alley-cropping incubations lignin N-fixing trees N mineralization polyphenols tropical agroecosystems |
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