Author:
Angus J. F.,van Herwaarden A. F.,Heenan D. P.,Fischer R. A.,Howe G. N.
Abstract
The relative importance of soil mineral nitrogen (N) available at the time of
sowing ormineralised during the growing season was investigated for 6 crops of
dryland wheat. The soil mineral N in the root-zone was sampled at sowing and
maturity and the rate of net mineralisation in the top 10 cm was estimated by
sequential sampling throughout the growing season, using an in situ method.
Mineralisation during crop growth was modelled in relation to total soil N,
ambient temperature, andsoil water content.
Mineral N accumulated before sowing varied by a factor of 3 between the sites
(from 67 to 195 kgN/ha), while the net mineralisation during crop growth
varied by a factor of 2 (from 43 to 99 kgN/ha). The model indicated that
0·092% of total N was mineralised per day when temperature and
water were not limiting, with rates decreasing for lower temperatures and soil
water contents. When tested with independent data, the model predicted the
mineralisation rate of soil growing continuous wheat crops but underestimated
mineralisation of soil in a clover-wheat rotation. For crops yielding <3
t/ha, the supply of N was mostly from mineralisation during crop growth
and the contribution from mineral N accumulated before sowing was relatively
small. For crops yielding >4 t/ha, thesupply of N was mostly from N
present in the soil at the time of sowing. The implication is that for crops
to achieve their water-limited yield, they must be supplied with an amount of
N greater than can be expected from mineralisation during the growing season,
either from fertiliser or from mineral N accumulated earlier.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
41 articles.
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