added nitrogen interaction
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2021 ◽  
Vol 103 ◽  
pp. 103285
Author(s):  
Qiang Ma ◽  
Xinhui Zhang ◽  
Zhijie Wu ◽  
Shuailin Li ◽  
Zhiqiang Xu ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 485 ◽  
pp. 225-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bao Tong Huang ◽  
Hua Zhou

A pot experiment was conducted to determine the effect of nitrogen fertilizer on the uptake of soil native N and fertilizer N by spring wheat using 15N isotopic dilution method. The results showed that fertilizer N addition restrained the uptake of soil N via a negative added nitrogen interaction (ANI), and the effect being more at higher rates of application. Additionly, fertilizer N increased the uptake of fertilizer N by wheat, in which grain uptook most of the nitrogen, followed by straw and root. The nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) ranged from 27%~51%, while 36%~63% of the fertilizer-N remained in soil ready for successive crop growth.


1997 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. BHOGAL ◽  
S. D. YOUNG ◽  
R. SYLVESTER-BRADLEY

In 1992 and 1993, eight rates of 15N-labelled fertilizer (0–245 kg ha−1) were applied to winter wheat growing on the Ropsley long term field trial where eight different N amounts had been applied annually since 1978. The fate of the labelled N in the crop and topsoil (0–23 cm) was determined at harvest in the year of 15N application and in the first and second residual years.By harvest in the second residual year, 60–77% of the original labelled application had been recovered in the crop and topsoil with 23–40% lost. These losses virtually all occurred within the first two growing seasons; there was no significant loss during the second residual year. Significant changes in the 15N balance were observed at N applications in excess of the range 140–175 kg ha−1 which suggested a marked decrease in the efficiency of N use and an increase in residual labile N in the soil at harvest. At low N applications (<175 kg ha−1), a positive added nitrogen interaction (ANI) was observed: 40–50% of this was a residual ANI due to the short or long term effect of applying N fertilizer, and the remainder was probably an apparent ANI due to pool substitution in the immobilization process. At large N applications (>175 kg ha−1) a negative ANI was observed: large N applications resulted in a net suppression of soil N uptake due to substitution by fertilizer for a limited plant N demand.


1997 ◽  
Vol 128 (4) ◽  
pp. 415-424 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. J. PILBEAM ◽  
A.M. McNEILL ◽  
H. C. HARRIS ◽  
R. S. SWIFT

15N-labelled fertilizer was applied at different rates (0, 30, 60, 90 kg N ha−1) and in different forms (urea or ammonium sulphate) to wheat grown in Syria in three seasons (1991/92, 1992/93 and 1994/95).Recovery of 15N-labelled fertilizer in the above-ground crop at harvest was low (8–22%), with the amount of 15N-labelled fertilizer recovered in the crop increasing as the rate of application increased. Fertilizer application caused a significant increase in the amount of unlabelled soil N in the crop, suggesting that the application of N fertilizer caused a ‘real’ added nitrogen interaction. Recovery of 15N-labelled fertilizer in the crop was unaffected by the form of the fertilizer.On average 31% (14–54%) of the 15N-labelled fertilizer remained in the soil at harvest, mostly in the 0–20 cm layer. At the lowest application rate (30 kg N ha−1) most of the residual fertilizer was as organic N, but at the higher application rates (60 and 90 kg N ha−1), a greater proportion of the 15N-labelled fertilizer was recovered as inorganic N, presumably as the result of top-dressing N in dry conditions in the spring. The amount of 15N-labelled fertilizer remaining in the soil increased as the fertilizer rate increased, but was unaffected by the form of fertilizer applied.Losses of 15N-labelled fertilizer were large (>35%), probably caused by gaseous losses, either through volatilization of N from the calcareous soil, or through denitrification from wet soils rich in organic residues.N fertilization strategies in the West Asia/North Africa (WANA) region should take note of the low recovery of N fertilizer by the crop in the season of application, and the resultant large quantities of residual fertilizer.


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