Author:
CHAMBERS B. J.,GARWOOD T. W. D.
Abstract
Lime loss rates were determined for 11 agricultural soils across
England (1987–92) under arable
cropping (six sites) and grassland management (five sites), receiving commercial
rates of fertilizer
inputs. Lime additions in the range 0–1500 kg ha−1
CaCO3 (250 kg ha−1 CaCO3 increments)
were
made annually to the sites. Soil pH (water and 0·01 m CaCl2)
and exchangeable calcium concentrations
were measured annually. The annual lime loss rates were calculated as the
amount of lime needed to
maintain the initial site pH or exchangeable Ca concentrations.Lime loss rates based on soil water pH varied between 40 and
1270 kg ha−1 CaCO3, on the basis
of CaCl2 pH between 0 and 1370 kg ha−1
CaCO3, and exchangeable Ca between 0 and 1540 kg ha−1
CaCO3. There was a positive relationship between the lime loss
rate (based on water pH) and initial
soil pH value (r=0·75; P<0·01), and
a negative relationship with soil organic matter content
(r=0·63; P<0·05) was based on soil pH,
organic matter content and nitrogen (N) fertilizer input. Lime
loss rates were approximately double those predicted by previous models
developed in the 1970s,
reflecting the greater quantities of inorganic N fertilizer now being applied
to agricultural land.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
15 articles.
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