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Soil Physical Properties and Organic Matter Fractions Under Forages Receiving Composts, Manure or Fertilizer
69
Citations
49
References
2005
Year
EngineeringSoil Organic MatterAgricultural EconomicsSoil ManagementLand ApplicationSoil Physical PropertiesSustainable AgriculturePublic HealthSoil FertilityBiogeochemistryPerennial Forage ProductionSoil ScienceAnimal Waste ManagementMixed ForageEnvironmental EngineeringOrganic MatterFarming SystemsForages Receiving CompostsOrganic Matter FractionsNutrient Management
A field study was conducted to assess the benefits, with respect to soil physical properties and soil organic matter fractions of utilizing composts from a diversity of sources in perennial forage production. A mixed forage (timothy-red clover (Trifolium pratense L.) and monocrop timothy (Phleum pratense L.) sward were fertilized annually with ammonium nitrate (AN) at up to 150kg and 300 N ha−1 yr−1, respectively, from 1998-2001. Organic amendments, applied at up to 600 kg N ha−1 yr−1 in the first two years only, included composts derived from crop residue (CSC), dairy manure (DMC) or sewage sludge (SSLC), plus liquid dairy manure (DM), and supplied C to soil at 4.6 and 9.2 (CSC), 10.9 (SSLC), 10.0 (DMC) 2.9 (DM) Mg C ha−1. Soil samples (0-5cm; 5-10cm;10-15cm) were recovered in 2000 and 2001. Improvements in soil physical properties (soil bulk density and water content) were obtained for compost treatments alone. Composts alone influenced soil C:N ratio and substantially increased soil organic carbon (SOC) concentration and mass (+ 5.2 to + 9.7 Mg C ha−1). Gains in SOC with AN of 2.7 Mg C ha−1 were detectable by the third crop production year (2001). The lower C inputs, and more labile C, supplied by manure (DM) was reflected in reduced SOC gains (+ 2.5 Mg C ha−1) compared to composts. The distribution of C in densiometric (light fraction, LF; >1.7 g cm−3) and particulate organic matter (POM; litter (>2000μm); coarse-sand (250-2000μm); fine-sand (53-250μm) fractions varied with compost and combining fractionation by size and density improved interpretation of compost dynamics in soil. Combined POM accounted for 82.6% of SOC gains with composts. Estimated compost turnover rates (k) ranged from 0.06 (CSC) to 0.09 yr−1 (DMC). Composts alone increased soil microbial biomass carbon (SMB-C) concentration (μg C g−1 soil). Soil available C (Cext) decreased significantly as compost maturity increased. For some composts (CSC), timothy yields matched those obtained with AN, and SOC gains were derived from both applied-C and increased crop residue-C returns to soil. A trend towards improved C returns across all treatments was apparent for the mixed crop. Matching composts of varying quality with the appropriate (legume/nonlegume) target crop will be critical to promoting soil C gains from compost use.
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