Abstract
Background and Aims
The forage grass Brachiaria humidicola (Bh) has been shown to reduce soil microbial nitrification. However, it is not known if biological nitrification inhibition (BNI) also has an effect on nitrogen (N) cycling during cultivation of subsequent crops. Therefore, the objective of this study was to investigate the residual BNI effect of a converted long-term Bh pasture on subsequent maize (Zea mays L.) cropping, where a long-term maize monocrop field (M) served as control.
Methods
Four levels of N fertilizer rates (0, 60, 120 and 240 kg N ha−1) and synthetic nitrification inhibitor (dicyandiamide) treatments allowed for comparison of BNI effects, while 15N labelled micro-plots were used to trace the fate of applied fertilizer N. Soil was incubated to investigate N dynamics.
Results
A significant maize yield increase after Bh was evident in the first year compared to the M treatment. The second cropping season showed an eased residual effect of the Bh pasture. Soil incubation studies suggested that nitrification was significantly lower in Bh soil but this BNI declined one year after pasture conversion. Plant N uptake was markedly greater under previous Bh compared with M. The N balance of the 15N micro-plots revealed that N was derived mainly (68–86%) from the mineralized soil organic N pool in Bh while plant fertilizer N recovery (18–24%) was not enhanced.
Conclusions
Applied N was strongly immobilized due to long-term root turnover effects, while a significant residual BNI effect from Bh prevented re-mineralized N from nitrification resulting in improved maize performance. However, a significant residual Bh BNI effect was evident for less than one year only.
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Introduction
Lost fertilizer nitrogen (N) from agricultural systems harms the environment via increased nitrate (NO3 −) amounts in water-bodies and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions to the atmosphere (Baligar et al. 2001). Nitrification is the microbial oxidation of ammonium (NH4 +) to NO3 −, whereas the latter mineral N form, due to its anionic charge, is very mobile in the mainly negative charged soil matrix compared to cationic NH4 +. Denitrifying microbes use NO3 − for their metabolism mainly under anaerobic conditions and contribute to N losses in gaseous forms. Natural grassland or forest systems generally have lower nitrification potentials compared with human made agricultural systems supplied with high N inputs that spur soil nitrification and consequently favor high N losses (Robertson and Groffman 2015).
Strategies to suppress nitrification after N fertilization could result in higher uptake of N in the form of NH4 + by crops and might be additionally beneficial for plants preferring N-NH4 + (Boudsocq et al. 2012), while reducing N losses to the environment. Synthetic nitrification inhibitors (SNIs) like nitrapyrin, 3,4-dimethylpyrazole phosphate (DMPP) and dicyandiamide (DCD) were shown to inhibit the activity of soil nitrifiers, but persistence of their effectiveness depends strongly on environmental factors (Zerulla et al. 2001; Fillery 2007; Ruser and Schulz 2015). In addition, prices for SNIs are beyond the reach of smallholders that manage low input systems in tropical and subtropical regions.
Research evidence for inhibition of NO3 − accumulation in a Colombian pasture soil under Brachiaria humidicola (Rendle) Schweick (Bh) was generated for the first time by Sylvester-Bradley et al. (1988). The development of a bioassay (Subbarao et al. 2006a) using the inhibitory action of Bh root exudates on recombinant Nitrosomonas europaea (Iizumi et al. 1998) subsequently allowed the detection of biological nitrification inhibition (BNI) in several tropical pasture grasses (Subbarao et al. 2007a). Using hydroponic systems, it was claimed that the exudation of BNI substances from roots of Bh is an active release of biological nitrification inhibitors that are triggered by the presence of NH4 + (Subbarao et al. 2007b). These Bh exudates contained BNI active substances like methyl-p-coumarate and methyl ferulate, while the shoot tissue contained other very effective BNI substances such as linoleic acid (LA) and linolenic (LN) acid (Gopalakrishnan et al. 2009). Additionally, the cyclic diterpene brachialactone was suggested to be the main substance in root exudates of Bh that suppresses nitrification (Subbarao et al. 2009). Moreover, BNI exudation is favored by low pH (Subbarao et al. 2007b).
However, little is known about the turnover of such compounds in soils. First studies under controlled conditions by Subbarao et al. (2008) indicated that LA maintained 50% of its inhibitory effect in terms of NO3 − produced per g dry soil after 120 days, whereas the BNI effect of LN was stable until the end of the incubation period (4 months). Since it was observed that a major BNI effect in Bh pastures can be established within 3 years (Subbarao et al. 2009), it is also likely that next to the active release of BNI substances root decomposition could contribute to the accumulation of BNI products in soil. Consequently, such a mechanism could result in a steady release of BNI substances inhibiting microbial nitrification for a prolonged time. This would be advantageous over SNIs that are exposed to rapid leaching under high rainfall and temperature conditions. Furthermore Brachiaria grasses are known for their deep rooting systems (Fisher et al. 1994; Boddey et al. 1996; Rao 1998) that could release BNI substances and inhibit nitrification and denitrification also in deeper soil layers.
Not much is known about how long and to what extent the BNI effect in soil remains after removal of Bh pastures. Furthermore, most of these substances are apparently anionic (Subbarao et al. 2007b) and will not be fixed by predominantly negatively charged soil aggregates. Additionally, microbes may start decomposing BNI substances once released to the soil as observed for other organic root derived substances (Lynch and Whipps 1990). A BNI persistence is of major interest for arable systems that obtain substantial N inputs often associated with high N losses. Tropical natural grasslands used as pastures are not fertilized and pastures with introduced grasses are commonly only initially fertilized during establishment (Miles et al. 2004). However fertilization takes part when degraded pastures are converted to crop areas (Kluthcouski et al. 2004). For instance, intensive cropping systems like mono-cropped maize often have low nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) (Raun and Johnson 1999). This is evidenced by high unaccounted N losses of 52–73% (Francis et al. 1993) in maize cropping systems via NO3 − leaching and N2O emission (Hilton et al. 1994) under high rainfall conditions. Specifically, when plants are still young and the root system is still small N-NH4 + fertilizer is rapidly nitrified accelerating environmental problems (Schröder et al. 2000).
To counteract these N losses, it could be speculated that pre-cropping of BNI plants contributes to inhibition of nitrification and consequently reduces N losses of applied fertilizer of subsequent cropping systems if the BNI active substances persist sufficiently long enough in soils. This is of great importance since Bh is one of the most exploited species planted in approximately 118 million hectares in Latin America (Miles et al. 2004). Potential benefits for subsequent crops in agro-pastoral rotation systems have been shown for upland rice after pasture (Sanz et al. 2004) although a possible contribution of BNI has not been established. The present study was conducted as part of a larger project on BNI (Rao et al. 2014). The first objective of this study was to test the residual BNI effect from a Bh pasture on subsequent maize crop performance in terms of grain yield, total N uptake and fertilizer N recovery. The second objective was to investigate the impact of residual BNI effect on soil N dynamics. Three hypotheses were tested: (I) A significant residual BNI effect is still present in the soil after removal of Bh, but is diminished in the second maize crop season compared to the first year after pasture conversion. (II) Nitrification inhibition is reflected by lower NO3 − amounts, lower nitrous oxide emissions, lower N fertilizer losses and consequently by improved soil N recovery in converted soils. (III) The turnover of Bh pasture residues in the converted soils have a positive effect on N nutrition, NUE and improved maize grain yield.
Materials and methods
Field site and experimental set-up
The study location was established at the Corpoica La Libertad Research Center in the Piedmont (Andean foothills) region of the Llanos of Colombia (4°03′46″N, 73°27′47″W). Mean annual rainfall is about 3685 mm with an average temperature of 21.4 °C at an elevation of 338 m above sea level.
The experiment included two fields (each 0.5 ha) in close vicinity (~2.3 km away). The first one, a 15 years-old productive Brachiaria humidicola (Rendle) Schweick cultivar Tully (CIAT 679) pasture (Bh) with high BNI potential (Subbarao et al. 2007a, 2009) was used to establish a maize (Zea mays L.) cropping field to test the residual BNI effect. As non BNI control field, a nearby cropped area, where maize (M) was grown as monocrop for the last 15 years was chosen. Fields were chisel plowed 2 times on May 25, 2013 and sprayed with glyphosate afterwards to impede regrowth of Bh and weeds. Dolomitic lime was applied at a rate of 2 t ha−1 to the field of the previous pasture whereas the maize field received 0.5 t ha−1 of lime. The different amounts of chalk were applied to align the different pH values of the two field sites (Table 1).
Each field site was split into 3 blocks with each block containing 4 main plots (20 × 20 m) that received different N fertilizer rates (0, 60, 120 and 240 kg N ha−1). A sub-plot was nested within the main plot with a size of 4.8 × 2.25 m (10.8 m2) consisting of a synthetic nitrification inhibitor (DCD, dicyandiamide) treatment for the 3 levels of N (60, 120 and 240 kg N ha−1). Basal fertilization included (per ha) 36 kg N applied in the form of diammonium phosphate (DAP), 75 kg potassium (K) and 40 (50 in 2014) kg phosphorus (P) combined with 30 kg Boronzinco® (4.5 kg Zn, 0.15 kg Cu, 0.75 kg B, 1.8 kg S) and 100 kg Delfoscamag® (3.3 kg P2O5, 13 kg MgO, 30 kg CaO, 8 kg S). Control plots (“0 N”) were not supplied with N but with all other mentioned elements. For the second and third N split dressing in 2013, N was supplied in the form of urea equally at 15 (17 in 2014) days after sowing (DAS) and 41 DAS, respectively. DCD was applied to respective sub-plots at the second and third N split application in both seasons with a total fertilizer N contribution rate of 20% DCD-N.
Maize was cropped in the last months (12 July 2013 and 27 June 2014) of the rainy seasons (Fig. 1). In 2013, a maize hybrid (Pioneer 30 K73) was sown in both fields using a planting density of 50,000 plants ha−1. In the second season (2014) a maize hybrid (Monsanto Dekalb 1596) with improved tolerance to fungal infection was chosen for both sites and sown at the recommended 60,000 plants ha−1. Due to different maturity of the two hybrids, maize cobs in the first season (2013) were harvested at 120 DAS, while in the second season (2014) they were harvested at 138 DAS. Grain yields were extrapolated based on the number of rows ha−1. Agronomic N use efficiency (ANUE) was calculated by dividing the applied fertilizer N amounts by N in maize grain yields.
Mineral N determination
Mineral N (Nmin) determination was done in 2013 at 41 DAS (before third N split application) and at 82 DAS. In 2014, mineral N was measured before second and after third N dressing. Soil Nmin was extracted at the field site with 1 M KCl. At each sampling date, 8 samples were taken randomly with an auger from the topsoil layer (0-20 cm) from each main and DCD subplot from the Bh and M fields (in 2014 only in the most contrasting N treatment plots, 0 and 240 N). Two representative sub-samples of 20 g fresh soil were taken. One sub-sample was used for determination of the soil dry matter by the gravimetric method, whereas another sub-sample was mixed in plastic bottles with 200 ml of KCl solution for Nmin determination. The bottles were shaken intermittently by hand for about half an hour and filtered through Whatman Grade 2 filter paper. Filtered extracts kept at 4 °C. NO3 − were measured in yellow ionized form derived from alkalization with sodium salicylate and NH4 + as green ammonium salicylate complex with a Synergy Ht ultraviolet spectrophotometer and analyzed with Gen5™ Data Collection and Analysis Software (BioTek™).
Soil incubations
Soil was collected from the fields for incubation studies conducted under controlled conditions. This method was chosen to determine differences in nitrification activity among the field sites (I), and secondly to test the efficiency of DCD (II) that was used as an alternative for having a non-BNI control in the trial. Topsoil (0–20 cm) was collected from main plots before sowing in both seasons and air dried for 48 h and sieved (2 mm mesh size) and visible root residues and small stones were removed. Afterwards, 5 g of soil were filled in small glass flasks followed by application of 1.5 ml ammonium sulfate ((NH4)2SO4) solution as substrate for nitrifiers. The N concentration applied to the flask was 226.4 mg N-NH4 + kg dry soil−1. DCD was diluted with the NH4 + solution at 20% of DCD-N contribution of the total N applied to the incubated soil (according to pre-tests, data not shown). Flasks were sealed with parafilm that contained 2 holes for aeration and incubated at 25 °C in the dark for 11, 13, 15, 17 and 19 days when soil Nmin was extracted with 50 ml 1 M KCl. Nitrification in soil was expressed as net increase (deviation from basal N) of μg N-NO3 − g organic N−1 (Norg −1 = total N – Nmin), whereas apparent net mineralization was calculated as μg N-NH4 + g Norg −1 over time. Total N was measured with an isotope ratio mass spectrometer (IRMS) as for other soil samples explained below.
15N micro-plots
For the N treatments 60 N (only 2013) and 120 N (2013 and 2014), 15N labeled N fertilizer was used to trace the fate of applied N and to determine 15N recovery in different soil layers and in maize plant tissue. Micro-plots were set up within the respective main plots of the N treatments mentioned above. Aluminum sheets were riveted together to a frame that was penetrated into the soil to a depth of 50 cm below the soil surface. Micro-plots had a size of 1.2 m2 (2 m × 0.6 m) in 2013 and 1.0 m2 (2 m × 0.5 m) in 2014 (due to higher planting density) and included 6 maize plants. 10.3883 atom % 15N enriched ammonium sulfate (15NH4)2SO4 (Sigma-Aldrich®) was used to prepare the applied nutrient solution that was sprayed with a hand pump on the soil surface. Two liters of the corresponding N solution were applied at sowing, 16 DAS and 41 DAS in 2013 according to the N rates of the respective main plots. Second and third N dressing date in 2014 were changed to 25 DAS and 46 DAS due to practical workload. As control to the 120 N micro-plots, DCD was mixed with (15NH4)2SO4 and conventional (NH4)2SO4 and applied to corresponding DCD micro-plots.
Maize and soil harvest in 15N micro-plots
All plants from the micro-plots were harvested at the same time after sowing in the respective seasons (at 120 DAS in 2013 and at 138 DAS in 2014). Samples were oven dried at 60 °C for 7 days, then separated into grains, spindle, shoot, leaves and roots and shredded separately. Plant materials were ball-milled and an amount of exactly measured 3–4 mg of the low N containing tissues (stems, roots, leaves) was filled into tin capsules (5 × 9 mm HEKAtech GmbH, Germany), while 2–3 mg of the ground maize grains were used for 15N determination. For the calculation of the 15N excess in the maize tissue, the background signal of non-enriched maize plant samples of the main and DCD subplots were measured.
Soil samples were taken right after harvest of the maize plants from the micro-plots. For estimation of soil 15N recovery, firstly the topsoil layer 0–10 and 10–20 cm were removed from each of the micro-plots and placed separately on plastic sheets and homogenized and sub-samples were taken. Afterwards, 6 cores were taken with an auger for the respective soil layers 20–40, 40–60, 60–100 cm and sub-cores mixed to receive two samples per layer per micro-plot. To calculate the natural 15N enrichment of the soil, corresponding samples were taken with an auger from the main plots at the same soil layers. All soil samples were oven dried (40 °C), homogenized, ground with a porcelain mortar and ball-milled. Furthermore, a set of intact cores of the respective main plots were taken for determination of bulk density and texture analysis according to the method of Zamudio et al. (2006).
15N, total N analysis and calculation
Samples were analyzed for total N and 15N by using a Euro Elemental analyzer coupled to a Finnigan Delta continuous-flow IRMS (Thermo Scientific, Bremen, Germany). The amount of the sampled material per capsule was calculated and adjusted to reach the optimal N target amount of about 50 μg N per sample. Yield and N recovery calculation were carried out following IAEA (2001) guidelines.
Maize yield for respective tissues was calculated according to the equation:
Where DM refers to dry matter and FW to fresh weight per area harvested. SDW and SFW correspond to dry weight and fresh weight of a sub-sample, respectively.
N yield for maize plants was estimated as:
Where %Ndff corresponds to ‘N derived from the fertilizer’
Fertilizer N recovery in maize plants or soil samples was calculated according to
15N atom% background was measured in maize plants or soil samples taken from the main plots where the respective micro-plots were installed.
Nitrous oxide emission measurements
Static rings with an inner diameter of 16 cm (2013) and 21 cm (2014) were installed in all main and sub-plots at the two fields M and Bh. For gas sampling, a chamber (volume 3901 cm3 in 2013, 6927 cm3 in 2014) was placed on the rings and sealed with a rubber band. A thermometer was installed through a sealed hole inside the chamber for initial temperature determination. After a settling time of 15 min four gas samples (0, 10, 20 and 30 min after chamber placement on the ring) were taken per chamber. Samples were taken with a syringe (5 ml) through the septum on the top of the chamber. In 2013, the first gas sampling took place 4 days after the second N split application in the main and DCD sub-plots (18 DAS), while second gas sampling was at 45 DAS, 4 days after the last N split application. For the second maize crop season (2014), the methodology was slightly adjusted due to practical and financial constraints. Gas emission was measured after the last N split (41 DAS) at 43 DAS, 45 DAS and 48 DAS in the main and DCD sub-plots of the 0 and 240 N treatments.
N2O flux was calculated according to:
where F N is the flux of N-N2O in μg m−2 h−1, T 0 = 273 K, T 1 = initial temperature in the chamber in K, V = volume in m3 of the chamber, A = chamber area in m2, dc the slope across the four N2O measurements per chamber in ppm N2O and dt = slope of measurement intervals in h. Factor k N20 (1.25 μg N μl−1) was used to convert N2O in ppm to μg N-N2O μl−1.
Statistical analysis
For statistical analysis, the SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA) was used. For intra-field data analysis a linear model with effects for blocks, N fertilizer rates, +/−DCD application and seasons (2013 or 2014) was fitted for within-trial data analysis using the GLIMMIX procedure. Studentized residuals were inspected graphically for normality and homogeneity. Factors or interactions among factors being not significant for α = 0.05 were removed from the model. Means of factors found significant in the type-III F-test (when p-value < 0.05) for the respective model were compared by using the LINES option in the LSMEANS statement. Precise p-values are presented to point out to differences in terms of significance among treatments below the cut-off level (p = 0.05). In order to account for pre-treatment field differences, mineral N results were partially expressed in relation to soil organic N content. For inter-field data analysis of not replicated pre-culture effects (Bh or M) we abstained from use of an adjusted (fixed effect) model but used simple plot t-tests for selected parameters without directly inferring a causal relationship. Due to this limitation, we included additional controls (e.g. +/− DCD) in the intra-field trials to assess BNI effects.
Results
Soil incubations
Laboratory incubation of soils collected before sowing maize in the first season (2013) after Bh revealed significant lower evolving NO3 − values during the incubation period compared to soils from the non BNI field M (Fig. 2). The incubation results demonstrated also an efficient nitrification inhibition by the applied SNI (DCD). Additionally, nitrification inhibition with DCD was not significantly different from the BNI effect. Net mineralization was significantly higher for M compared to M + DCD or Bh. During the incubation M showed minor changes in terms of NH4 + mineralization, but decreasing N-NH4 + values under BNI (Bh) and SNI (M + DCD) suggested a strong immobilization of applied mineral N in the soil in 2013. In contrast, soil incubations before maize sowing in 2014 showed similarly high nitrification activity in soils from Bh and M (Fig. 2). As already observed in 2013, the application of DCD in 2014 to both Bh and M reduced nitrification activity severely.
In 2013, field NO3 − values in topsoil at 42 DAS (Table 2) one day before the third N split fertilizer application and at the end of the vegetative phase (82 DAS) were low in both fields with no major significant residual effect to previous applications of N or DCD. Comparison of the 2 sampling dates within each field indicated higher NO3 − values at 82 DAS compared to 42 DAS for Bh (p = 0.0012) whereas this was not significant for the M field (p = 0.1488). In 2014, both soil mineral N forms were measured but only in the two most contrasting N rate treatments. At 32 DAS no significant N fertilization effect on the N form or quantities in the topsoil were observed. However, 3 weeks after third and last N dressing (66 DAS) Bh topsoil was significantly higher in N-NH4 + compared to N-NO3 − (p = 0.0027) whereas this could not be observed for M treatment (p = 0.1866) (data not shown).
Maize yields in first cropping season, 2013
Maize grain yields from plots established after the previous Bh pasture did not differ among 0 N and 60 N (Fig. 3a). In contrast, a yield increase of more than 10 times (p = 0.0012) was observed in the M field between yields of the 0 N treatment with 215 kg maize grain and 2226 kg maize grains at 60 N (Fig. 3b). Further N application above 60 kg N ha−1 did not result in higher yields in both fields, but yields after Bh were higher than the control. Plants in DCD sub-plots showed lower grain yields in Bh at 60 and 120 N compared to DCD free Bh. However, this was not observed for the higher N levels in both fields. Maize yields were always higher for Bh than in the M field for all respective N and DCD treatments.
The agronomic N use efficiency (ANUE) in plots after the previous pasture (Fig. 3c, d) outperformed those in the continuous maize field with ANUE of 85 kg grain/kg N fertilizer and 37 kg grain/kg N fertilizer, respectively when 60 kg N/ha was applied. ANUE decreased with rising N fertilizer amounts in Bh (p < 0.0001) and M (p = 0.0023) from 60 to 120 N and was significantly lower for the DCD treatment at 60 N but not for 120 N and 240 N.
Maize yields in second cropping season, 2014
In the second cropping season, a clear yield response (Fig. 4a, b) to rising N supply rates was observed in the main plots at both field sites up to a threshold of 120 kg N ha−1, but N fertilization was of less importance to yield formation in Bh (p = 0.0082) compared to M control (p < 0.0001). Under both pre-crop treatments, DCD resulted in lower yields compared to respective N fertilizer levels. A t-test on same N fertilizer levels and DCD treatments suggested only for 0 N significant higher yields for Bh compared to M.
The ANUE (Fig. 4c, d) showed smaller differences among Bh and M than in 2013. Increasing N rates reduced ANUE stronger in M (p = 0.003) than in Bh (p = 0.0112). DCD application resulted in lower ANUE in Bh at 60 N and 120 N compared to non DCD plots whereas in M this was confirmed for low N comparison (60 N) only.
When ANUE in the first and second season were compared, higher ANUE was found in Bh in 2013 at 60 N and all + DCD treatments, but not for fertilization at 120 and 240 N. In the control field M the trend was the opposite compared to Bh: generally higher ANUE in 2014 compared to the first season, except at 60 N and 120 N + DCD.
15N recovery in maize plants and soil profile
In 2013 under low N fertilizer rates (60 kg N) an average of 12.0% of applied 15N was recovered in plant parts in M plots compared to a not significant higher plant N recovery of 18.2% in Bh (Fig. 5). Application of 120 kg N ha−1 showed as well no difference in plant 15N recovery between M (26.2%) and Bh (23.6%). In M, plant 15N recovery was increased at 120 N compared to 60 N, but DCD had no significant effect on plant N recovery at the same N fertilizer level.
In 2014 plant 15N recovery values at 120 N were above 30% in both fields, however, they were not significantly higher than in the respective treatments in 2013. As in 2013, DCD did not significantly increase plant N recovery either. Overall, soil 15N recovery was not affected significantly by N rate, DCD or the interaction of both (N rate*DCD) within the respective fields and seasons. Total soil 15N recovery in 2014 for Bh ranged between 42.0% (120 N) and 48.6% (120 N + DCD) being statistically similar to M values of 46.9% at 120 N and 37.8% at 120 N + DCD.
In both cropping seasons, most of the detected 15N within the soil profile was still found in the topsoil layer 0–10 cm (Fig. 6). No consistent significant treatments effects on depth movement were found. However, apparently DCD application decreased the relative 15N recovery in the subsoil (0–60 cm) in both fields in 2013, indicated by a 15N topsoil:subsoil recovery ratio for Bh (p = 0.054) of 2.9 (Bh 120 N) and 5.0 (Bh 120 N + DCD) and 2.1 (M 120 N) and 4.6 (M 120 N + DCD) (p = 0.674). However, this pattern was not confirmed in the second season.
Unaccounted N losses (Fig. 5) in 2013 for Bh varied between 45.1% (120 N) and 48.3% (120 N + DCD) compared to 44.8% and 46.7% for M in the respective N treatments (Fig. 5). In Bh micro-plots N losses were not affected by the fertilizer rate or DCD application or its interaction (N rate*DCD). Furthermore, the cropping season effect was significant (p = 0.0224) for Bh. N loss comparison among the fields on the same N levels showed no significant (t-test) difference in terms of lost N amounts in both seasons.
In both years, Bh showed higher total plant N yields compared to M (Table 3) being expressed more strongly in the first season after Bh pasture conversion. Within Bh plant N uptake was not significantly affected by N rate, DCD, year or its interaction. Maize cultivated on the previous pasture field (Bh) took up higher amounts of N from the soil in 2013 than from applied fertilizer N (p < 0.0001), however not in 2014 (p = 0.6298). The opposite was observed for maize in the control field (M) in 2013, i.e. N uptake from the fertilizer was higher (p = 0.0093) compared to soil N uptake when N rate was 120 N (+/− DCD) in the first season, whereas in 2014 it was vice versa.
Nitrous oxide emission
Nitrous oxide emissions (N2O) in the first maize season (2013) showed no significant N rate, DCD or N rate*DCD effect for both fields but large differences among the three field plot replications (Table 2). Inter-field analysis via t-test indicated significantly lower N2O emissions in M than in Bh for some N rates or +/−DCD treatments, but a clear trend was absent. During the second cropping season (2014) after pasture conversion N2O flux values were not significantly different than in 2013, due to the observed large variability. N fertilizer application increased N2O emissions particularly at the third sampling date in 2014 (7 days after N fertilization, 48 DAS) for M (p = 0.0432). However, at the same time N2O emissions were decreased when DCD was applied together with 240 N being significant for M. The pattern looked similar for Bh although effects on emissions were not significant. The control (0 N) showed low N2O emissions in both fields at all 3 sampling dates indicating that the observed increase in N2O emissions under 240 N was due to N fertilization. The comparison of the trials Bh and M via t-test indicated no significant differences in N2O emissions among the fields in 2014.
Discussion
Residual effect of Bh on maize crop performance
The hypothesis that the previous Bh CIAT 679 pasture has a positive effect on maize growth could be confirmed. Even when no N fertilizer was applied grain yields kept up with the commonly found range of 3.0–4.5 t ha−1 for the Colombian Eastern Plains (Thomas et al. 2004). This is in line with observations by Moreta et al. (2014), who showed higher maize grain yields on a previous Bh pasture field compared to those on a previous maize-soybean rotation or on a converted native savanna field. Long-term pasture use (Bh) was likely to have enhanced the soil organic matter content compared to the control (M) field. Furthermore, the shift from pasture to crop could have had positive effects in terms of reduced pests and diseases as known from field research in the Brazilian Cerrados (Lopes et al. 2004). As shown by Fisher et al. (1994) and Amézquita et al. (2004), improved pastures of Bh can have positive effects on soil physical, chemical and biological properties. An estimated amount of root N of 18 kg ha−1 in Brachiaria pastures has been reported (Rao 1998), and is likely to even increase under well managed long-term pasture use as found by De Oliveira et al. (2004). Decomposition studies with litter bags have shown that even 140 days after incorporation 40% of nutrients can remain in the soil in the form of Bh litter (Thomas and Asakawa 1993), whereas the half-life (in terms of N release) for maize residues has been documented between only 43–35 days (Thomas et al. 2004). Therefore, it is suggested that mineralized N from enhanced organic matter contributed to the observed improved crop nutrition of the subsequent maize crop in the first season of the present study. Furthermore, the importance of additional fertilizer N on maize yield formation was higher for M than for Bh, which relied to a larger extent on N derived from soil. ANUE results further supported the beneficial effect of the long-term Bh pasture. However, Basamba et al. (2006) reported lower yields under no- and minimum tilled Colombian savanna Oxisols in the following maize cropping seasons compared to a maize monoculture, suggesting that converting (no BNI) native grassland into arable land does not necessarily result in a positive yield increase of the subsequent crop. Furthermore, an experiment in 1989 showed that upland rice yields were significantly higher after a 10 year old Brachiaria decumbens (Bd) pasture compared to rice after the conversion of a savanna, even when no N was applied (Sanz et al. 2004). This is analog to the observation of the present study. However, BNI as additional benefit from Bd has not been mentioned in the article, although BNI activity has not only been detected in Bh but also in Bd (Subbarao et al. 2007a). Thus, the focus on the combined effect of organic matter dynamics as well as a BNI effect in our field trial on crop performance after Bh pasture use is therefore new and has probably not been studied since the residual BNI of Brachiaria grasses was not yet known or simply ignored.
Evidence of the residual BNI effect
We hypothesized that the BNI effect induced by Brachiaria humidicola will be present in the soil even when the pasture has been removed and that this has a positive effect on the succeeding maize crop. Residual BNI activity was evident in reduced nitrification in soil from the previous Bh pasture in 2013 in the incubation study. This is in line with similar early observations by Sylvester-Bradley et al. (1988), Ishikawa et al. (2003) and Subbarao et al. (2006a, 2007a) who also found lower nitrification in terms of low NO3 − values over time and stable NH4 + values under existing Bh pastures. In terms of soil incubation effects, however, two processes might operate simultaneously, i.e. a net substance effect (exudates or extracts from plant tissues applied to soil) as well as a residual fine root effect influencing N dynamics through N mineralization and immobilization (Purchase 1974). According to Robertson and Groffman (2015), microbial nitrifiers are rather weak competitors for available NH4 +, and nitrification accelerates when NH4 + supply exceeds the demand of the plants. Organic matter with a high C:N ratio causes microbial immobilization (Urquiaga et al. 1998; Sakala et al. 2000), and Thomas and Asakawa (1993) documented C:N ratios of Bh litter within a range of 89 – 160. However, immobilization and consequently substrate shortage was also observed in the control soil (M) since maize roots and maize stover as well have high C:N ratios (Paré et al. 2000), although net nitrification prevailed. Application of DCD to M soil resulted in low nitrification in both incubation studies, and on the other hand confirmed the presence of active BNI effects after Bh. However, the effect might be partly reduced by the accompanied decreasing NH4 +, which was probably the consequence of immobilization favored by DCD (Juma and Paul 1983; Clay et al. 1990), since soil microorganisms seem to have a preference for NH4 + rather than for NO3 − (Recous et al. 1992). Under field conditions, the observed varying NO3 − levels in topsoil indicated that nitrification was not consistently or completely inhibited by the residual BNI effect, not even throughout the first cropping season.
Subbarao et al. stated in their review (2006b) that the suppression of nitrification is a potential key strategy to improve N recovery and ANUE. The present study confirmed that in the first season the residual BNI effect contributed to enhanced N yields and improved ANUE. Uptake of soil derived N by the maize crop was higher for Bh compared to M, a potential consequence of enhanced retention of mineralized N and consequently N nutrition of maize. However, the residual BNI effect was not reflected in higher fertilizer 15N uptake nor were fertilizer 15N losses reduced compared to the control site. Our data suggested that applied 15N was very rapidly immobilized in the topsoil and that maize in the Bh field compensated the low N availability by taking up mineralized N from sub-soil layers, which explains the enhanced N nutrition of maize in the Bh site.
According to our study, the lack of the residual BNI effect on N2O emissions suggests that residual BNI does not necessarily have a similar effect as the in situ pasture BNI effect described by Subbarao et al. (2009) where N2O emissions were found to be reduced. It has been shown by Fisher et al. (1994) and Amézquita et al. (2004) that accumulation of Bh root biomass can vastly enhance soil C. Others reported that denitrification is also spurred by available C substrates (Bergstrom et al. 1994). For the Bh site enhanced C availability is expected as indicated by the higher organic matter contents favoring denitrifiers (Firestone and Davidson 1989), that might have masked a sound N2O reduction due to residual BNI in the subsequent maize crop. Due to the high rainfall (i.e. 3685 mm/year) in the area temporal anaerobic conditions that favor denitrification are expected during and shortly after heavy rainfall despite reasonably good drainage of these Oxisols.
Persistence of BNI
Generally, turnover of plant residues in humid tropical systems is fast (Urquiaga et al. 1998). Therefore, it was hypothesized that the BNI effect from previously released root exudates or contained within incorporated Bh material would diminish over time. Subbarao et al. (2007a) could show that in soil from 10 year old Bh field plots, including the CIAT 679 accession, inhibited nitrification activity lasted up to 30 days after incubation initiation. After 15 years of pasture use with Bh CIAT 679 we expected a substantial amount of BNI substances in the soil as shown by Subbarao et al. (2008), however a technique to measure these active compounds in the soil has still not been developed. The present study confirmed that nitrification inhibition in soil could be observed until about 6 weeks after removal of Bh. However, a BNI effect before the second cropping season 2014 could not be confirmed in the incubation assay any more. Our results thus suggest that a substantial residual BNI effect on soil processes lasted for less than 1 year. Consequently, it could be speculated that BNI inhibitor compounds are exposed to decomposition limiting their persistence in soils. Lower BNI persistence over time was expected since Bh root exudates contain hydrophobic and hydrophilic substances (Ipinmoroti et al. 2008) where the latter are prone to leaching, and furthermore, that several released substances from incorporated Bh litter may attract heterotrophic microbial populations that metabolize C (Lynch and Whipps 1990).
Effect of DCD on maize crop performance
The synthetic control treatment (DCD) showed no efficient nitrification inhibition in the field in contrast to its efficiency under controlled conditions. Furthermore, no significant beneficial effects of DCD on plant N recovery, soil N recovery nor a reduction of 15N losses in the micro-plots in the previous Bh pasture could be found in both years, while for M even significant increased 15N losses in both years were observed. Regardless of its ability to prevent N losses from soil DCD in the presented study did not favor crop growth and performance. Losses of the mobile DCD from system with high rainfall have been observed by Amberger (1989). Weiske et al. (2001) could also not confirm a positive DCD effect on maize, but observed lower emission of N2O since DCD has been shown to retard nitrification (Prasad et al. 1971) and consequently reduce NO3 − as substrate for denitrifiers. Earlier, Clay et al. (1990) reported reduced maize grain yields combined with lower total N uptake by the crop. According to the reduced NH4 + mineralization results in the presented incubation study it is suggested that DCD favors N immobilization. Such an effect has been observed also by others (Guiraud et al. 1989; Clay et al. 1990; Ernfors et al. 2014) and could have had a negative impact on N nutrition of the maize plants. Its stability and effectiveness is also known to be negatively affected by high soil temperature (Ruser and Schulz 2015). We thus cannot confirm high effectiveness of DCD in the field, like others, e.g. Merino et al. (2001) who found no N2O reduction in a DCD treated and mineral fertilized grassland soil in Northern Spain.
Conclusions
This is the first in depth study on the potential residual BNI effect of Bh on a following maize cropping system. The residual effect of the long-term Bh pasture increased maize grain yields in the first season under all evaluated N fertilizer rates and in the second season after pasture conversion for the treatment without N fertilizer compared to arable land. This was associated with a higher total N uptake under the previous Bh pasture compared to M as well as significant reduced nitrification in incubated soils under Bh confirming a residual BNI effect. The study further suggested that applied N was partially immobilized due to large amounts of incorporated Bh roots during conversion with a high C:N ratio; and N was subsequently slowly re-mineralized and consequently contributed to maize N nutrition. Hence, maize performance in Bh depended less on fertilizer N compared to the control field M. The contribution of applied N to yield formation increased in the second season due to a diminished influence of the Bh residues. Mineral N in topsoil was not significantly influenced by the amount of N fertilizer a few days after final N dressing in 2013 that supports the strong immobilization observed in vitro. At a later stage increased amounts of available N-NO3 − were visible being a good indication for the superior plant growth and grain production in the BNI field however also a possible reduced residual BNI effect in the topsoil at 120 days after Bh incorporation.
It was challenging to identify the net residual BNI effect of the previous Bh pasture due to interactions with decomposing Bh plant material. Thus, parallel processes interact where previously released BNI substances from Bh inhibit or retard nitrification while decomposition is accompanied by a mineralization and green manure effect, that provides NH4 + as substrate for nitrifiers and the immobilization effect due to a high C:N ratio that can indirectly decrease nitrification. Furthermore, the link between BNI and N2O emission seems not to be clear yet and more frequent sampling might capture the peak of N2O emission and identify a possible positive effect due to residual BNI. As control to BNI in the field DCD turned out to lose its nitrification inhibition effect too fast under these humid tropical conditions and therefore alternative substances (DMPP) should be considered for further testing.
Generally N losses from extensively managed pasture systems are low even when N is supplied to fight degradation of the grassland over time. BNI could therefore play a more important role in terms of its residual effect for subsequent crops under high N fertilization compared to possible N loss reduction under present Bh pastures. Therefore, it is suggested to investigate further mechanism and persistence of a residual BNI effect and its influence on soil N dynamics in field studies.
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Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank the following people for assistance in the field and laboratory at CIAT and Corpoica in Colombia: Ashly Arevalo, Gonzalo Borrero, Pedro Herrera, Yeisson Herrera, Hernan Mina, Edwin Palma, Oscar Pardo, Paola Pardo, Mauricio Sotelo, Daniel Vergara and Aracely Vidal. For support in Hohenheim the authors are thankful to Sahira Vásquez Báez and Ana María García Hoyos. Thanks to Elke Dachtler and Christian Brandt for the support at the IRMS. For assisting in the interpretation of the GHG data we are grateful to Ivan Guzman-Bustamante and Rong Lang. Furthermore we would like to thank Filippo Cappezone for support with the statistical data analysis.
We very much appreciate the financial support of the project “Climate-smart crop-livestock systems for smallholders in the tropics: Integration of new forage hybrids to intensify agriculture and to mitigate climate change through regulation of nitrification in soil” by the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ, Germany). This work was done as part of the CGIAR research program on livestock and fish. We thank all donors that globally support the work of the program through their contributions to the CGIAR system.
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Karwat, H., Moreta, D., Arango, J. et al. Residual effect of BNI by Brachiaria humidicola pasture on nitrogen recovery and grain yield of subsequent maize. Plant Soil 420, 389–406 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-017-3381-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-017-3381-z