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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 48:838-843 (1984)
© 1984 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Fate of Nitrogen-15 Applied to Spring Wheat Grown for Three Consecutive Years in a Semiarid Region1

Sala Feigenbaum2, N.G. Seligman3 and R. W. Benjamin3

ABSTRACT

Uptake and recovery of fertilizer N applied to spring wheat was monitored over a 3-yr period in a semiarid region. Tagged fertilizer with enrichment from 8.9 to 28.5 atom % 15N was applied as KNO3 at rates equivalent to 180 kg N ha–1 as a single application or split equally over 3 yr. The wheat was grown in 1.25- x 1.25-m open plots and in 0.3-m diam microplots enclosed by hard plastic tubes that were inserted 0.6 m into the ground. The 15N enrichments in plant and soil were determined by emission spectrometry. In open plots fertilizer N recovery in plant and soil was 976 g kg–1 in the first year and 697 to 721 g kg–1 in subsequent years. In the tubes, equivalent recoveries were 755 to 841 g kg–1 and 377 to 560 g kg–1. The greater loss in the tubes is attributed to denitrification that could have occurred under excess waterlogging caused by the rim of the tubes that protruded about 0.05 m above the soil surface. In a dry year, 338 to 558 g kg–1 of the applied fertilizer N was found as mineral N in the soil and, especially in the open plots, was utilized in the second growing season, after which only negligible amounts remained in the mineral N fraction. At the end of the third year, 69 to 84 g kg–1 of the applied fertilizer N was found in the soil as organic N. At the end of 3 yr, recovery of fertilizer N was lower when determined directly with 15N than when determined by difference between treatments and control. The additional N could result from the controversial "priming effect" of fertilizer N application on release of soil N, although the evidence is not conclusive. It is concluded that when fertilizer N is applied in a dry season, a large amount of residual mineral N in soil remains at the end of the growing period. This N can be utilized in subsequent years and should be taken into account when determining fertilizer requirements. In a wet years, losses can be significant and residual fertilizer N in the soil is negligible.


NOTES

1 Contribution from the Agricultural Research Organization, The Volcani Center, Bet Dagan 50–250, Israel. No. 443-E 1982 series.

2 Soil Scientist, Institute of Soils and Water, ARO.

3 Agronomists, Institute of Field and Garden Crops, ARO.

Received for publication July 20, 1982. Accepted for publication February 8, 1984.







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The Plant Genome
Copyright © 1984 by the Soil Science Society of America.