Summary
The changes in the ammonium-N and nitrate-N contents of bare fallow and soil under the first and third crops of winter wheat after fallow were followed on plots of Broadbalk Field, Rothamsted, which have received for each crop 14 tons farmyard manure (FYM) per acre, ‘complete minerals’ (P, K, Na, Mg), or ‘complete minerals’ + nitrogen fertilizers.
More mineral N was produced during fallow on the plot receiving FYM than on the other plots. Soil under wheat also contained more mineral N on the FYM plots than elsewhere. Nitrogen fertilizers applied in the spring temporarily increased the mineral-N content of the soil, but were rapidly removed by the crop. Ammonium sulphate applied in the autumn was lost from the surface soil by the following March through nitrification and leaching.
Twice as much mineral-N was produced when soil from the FYM plot was incubated as when soils from other plots were similarly treated. Nitrate formed during fallow was leached into the subsoil during the autumn and winter, and recovered by the wheat during the following spring and summer. Its existence is not detected by sampling the surface soil, nor by an incubation test. This source of nitrogen complicates the use of laboratory measurements to assess the fertilizer nitrogen required by winter wheat. Since the crop removed mineral N from the surface soil by March, estimation of the amount then present was also of no value for making fertilizer recommendations.
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Gasser, J.K.R. Effects of long-continued treatment on the mineral nitrogen content and mineralisable nitrogen of soil from selected plots of the Broadbalk experiment on continuous wheat, Rothamsted. Plant Soil 17, 209–220 (1962). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01376225
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01376225