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Gaseous Nitrogen Losses from a Cambisol Cropped to Spring Wheat with Urea Sizes and Placement Depths
37
Citations
45
References
2009
Year
Precision AgricultureEngineeringBotanyAgricultural EconomicsLand ApplicationUrea SizesCambisol CroppedGaseous Nitrogen LossesSustainable AgricultureN 2Public HealthCumulative FluxesSoil FertilitySoil GasBiogeochemistryCrop ProductionSoil ScienceCrop YieldN FertilizerAmmoniaCrop ProtectionNutrient Management
Globally identifying mitigation options for the emission of reactive N gases from agricultural soils is a research priority. We investigated the effect of urea size and placement depth on sources and emissions of N gases from a Cambisol cropped to spring wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.). In Exp. 1, wheat received either prilled urea (PU) mixed within the soil, urea super granule (USG; diam. 10.1 mm) point‐placed at a soil‐depth of 7.5 cm, or no N fertilizer. In Exp. 2, wheat received either USG (diam. 10.2 mm) point‐placed at 2.5‐, 5.0‐, and 7.5‐cm soil depths, or no N fertilizer. In both experiments, maximum peaks for nitrous oxide (N 2 O) fluxes and nitrification were delayed by 2 to 3 wk in the USG compared with the PU treatment. The added 15 N‐urea lost as 15 N‐N 2 O over 116 d was only 0.01% for both PU and USG treatments in Exp. 1. This loss for USGs was higher in Exp. 2 (0.02–0.15%) measured over 70 d, mainly related to higher moisture‐induced denitrification. Temporal N 2 O fluxes were significantly related to changes in soil NO 3 − –N, water‐filled pore space and NH 4 + –N (R 2 = 0.50, P < 0.05). However, the previous predictive model of Khalil et al. (2006) could best estimate its cumulative fluxes over time. The relative losses of ammonia (0.07–1.17%) and nitrogen oxides (0.19–1.54%) measured in Exp. 2 over 43 d decreased with increasing depths of USG placement. The USG point‐placed at the 5.0‐ and 7.5‐cm depths decreased the pooled gaseous N losses by 35 and 77%, respectively, over the shallower placement. The 15 N results imply that soil N could be the major source of N 2 O emissions (79–97%). Field studies are suggested to validate our findings that the deeper placement of USG can decrease N emissions under arable cropping.
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