Gale Eric S, Sullivan Dan M, Cogger Craig G, Bary Andy I, Hemphill Delbert D, Myhre Elizabeth A
Dep. of Crop and Soil Science, Oregon State Univ., Corvallis, OR 97331, USA.
J Environ Qual. 2006 Oct 27;35(6):2321-32. doi: 10.2134/jeq2006.0062. Print 2006 Nov-Dec.
Recent adoption of national rules for organic crop production have stimulated greater interest in meeting crop N needs using manures, composts, and other organic materials. This study was designed to provide data to support Extension recommendations for organic amendments. Specifically, our objectives were to (i) measure decomposition and N released from fresh and composted amendments and (ii) evaluate the performance of the model DECOMPOSITION, a relatively simple N mineralization/immobilization model, as a predictor of N availability. Amendment samples were aerobically incubated in moist soil in the laboratory at 22 degrees C for 70 d to determine decomposition and plant-available nitrogen (PAN) (n = 44), and they were applied preplant to a sweet corn crop to determine PAN via fertilizer N equivalency (n = 37). Well-composted materials (n = 14) had a single decomposition rate, averaging 0.003 d(-1). For uncomposted materials, decomposition was rapid (>0.01 d(-1)) for the first 10 to 30 d. The laboratory incubation and the full-season PAN determination in the field gave similar estimates of PAN across amendments. The linear regression equation for lab PAN vs. field PAN had a slope not different from one and a y-intercept not different than zero. Much of the PAN released from amendments was recovered in the first 30 d. Field and laboratory measurements of PAN were strongly related to PAN estimated by DECOMPOSITION (r(2) > 0.7). Modeled PAN values were typically higher than observed PAN, particularly for amendments exhibiting high initial NH(4)-N concentrations or rapid decomposition. Based on our findings, we recommend that guidance publications for manure and compost utilization include short-term (28-d) decomposition and PAN estimates that can be useful to both modelers and growers.
最近国家有机作物生产规则的采用激发了人们对使用粪肥、堆肥和其他有机材料来满足作物氮需求的更大兴趣。本研究旨在提供数据以支持关于有机改良剂的推广建议。具体而言,我们的目标是:(i)测量新鲜和堆肥改良剂的分解情况以及释放的氮;(ii)评估相对简单的氮矿化/固定模型DECOMPOSITION作为氮有效性预测指标的性能。在实验室中,将改良剂样品在22摄氏度的潮湿土壤中进行好氧培养70天,以确定分解情况和植物有效氮(PAN)(n = 44),并在种植前将其施用于甜玉米作物,通过肥料氮当量来确定PAN(n = 37)。充分堆肥的材料(n = 14)具有单一的分解速率,平均为0.003 d⁻¹。对于未堆肥的材料,在最初的10至30天内分解迅速(>0.01 d⁻¹)。实验室培养和田间全季PAN测定对不同改良剂的PAN估计结果相似。实验室PAN与田间PAN的线性回归方程斜率与1无显著差异,y轴截距与0无显著差异。改良剂释放的大部分PAN在最初30天内被回收。田间和实验室对PAN的测量与DECOMPOSITION估计的PAN密切相关(r²>0.7)。模拟的PAN值通常高于观测值,特别是对于初始NH₄-N浓度高或分解迅速的改良剂。基于我们的研究结果,我们建议关于粪肥和堆肥利用的指导出版物应包括短期(28天)分解情况和PAN估计值,这对建模者和种植者都可能有用。