Piggery pond sludge as a nitrogen source for crops. 1. Mineral N supply estimated from laboratory incubations and field application of stockpiled and wet sludge


Autoria(s): Kliese, YJ; Dalal, RC; Strong, WM; Menzies, NW
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Piggery pond sludge (PPS) was applied, as-collected (Wet PPS) and following stockpiling for 12 months ( Stockpiled PPS), to a sandy Sodosol and clay Vertosol at sites on the Darling Downs of Queensland. Laboratory measures of N availability were carried out on unamended and PPS-amended soils to investigate their value in estimating supplementary N needs of crops in Australia's northern grains region. Cumulative net N mineralised from the long-term ( 30 weeks) leached aerobic incubation was described by a first-order single exponential model. The mineralisation rate constant (0.057/week) was not significantly different between Control and PPS treatments or across soil types, when the amounts of initial mineral N applied in PPS treatments were excluded. Potentially mineralisable N (N-o) was significantly increased by the application of Wet PPS, and increased with increasing rate of application. Application of Wet PPS significantly increased the total amount of inorganic N leached compared with the Control treatments. Mineral N applied in Wet PPS contributed as much to the total mineral N status of the soil as did that which mineralised over time from organic N. Rates of CO2 evolution during 30 weeks of aerobic leached incubation indicated that the Stockpiled PPS was more stabilised (19-28% of applied organic C mineralised) than the Wet PPS (35-58% of applied organic C mineralised), due to higher lignin content in the former. Net nitrate-N produced following 12 weeks of aerobic non-leached incubation was highly correlated with net nitrate-N leached during 12 weeks of aerobic incubation (R-2 = 0.96), although it was

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:76216

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

C S I R O Publishing

Palavras-Chave #Piggery Manure #Nitrogen Mineralisation Potentials #Aerobic Mineralisable N #Anaerobic Mineralisable N #Ammonium-n #Nitrate-n #Soil Organic Matter #Pig Slurry #Available Nitrogen #Manure Application #Sewage Sludges #Cattle Slurry #Pasture Soil #Plant Uptake #Queensland #Ammonium #Agriculture, Multidisciplinary #Soil Organic-matter #C1 #300103 Soil Chemistry #770402 Land and water management
Tipo

Journal Article