Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

C/N ratio of high-organic C materials is a poor predictor of microbial nitrate immobilization potential in a nitrate-rich soil: An 15N incubation study

SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH(2024)

Cited 0|Views22
No score
Abstract
Nitrate (NO3- -N) accumulation in soils resulting from excessive nitrogen (N) fertilization increases risks of N loss to the environment. Microbial NO3- -N immobilization (INO3) can be stimulated by adding high-organic carbon (C) materials to soils and has potential to control N loss from agricultural soils during periods of NO3- -N accumulation. It is therefore important to screen for such organic materials that show a rapid and high capacity of I-NO3. The C/N ratio of organic materials is considered a primary factor controlling soil I-NO3, but this is challenged for high-organic C soil amendments that have similar C/N ratios but contain components with very different microbial degradability. Our objective was to identify better predictors of the I-NO3 potential of high organic C materials with comparable C/N ratios. Using a N-15-tracing laboratory experiment on one nitrate-rich agricultural soil with and without 11 types of organic C materials, we observed that those with similar C/N ratios (>18) increased the I(NO3 )to varying degrees. Once organic amendments exceed a C/N ratio of 18, this ratio may no longer be an ideal index for estimating rapid I-NO3 potential. We provide evidence that the C mineralization of high-organic C soil amendments, determined as CO2 emission over 12 days, more accurately predicts the potential for rapid I-NO3 in soil.
More
Translated text
Key words
Organic material,MicrobialNO(3)(-)-N immobilization,C/N ratio,NO3--N accumulation,C mineralization
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined