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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 32:86-90 (1968)
© 1968 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Uptake of Fertilizer and Soil Nitrogen by Ryegrass, as Affected by Carbonaceous Residue1

G. L. Terman and M. A. Brown2

ABSTRACT

Annual ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum) was grown on limed Hartsells fine sandy loam and Decatur silty clay loam fertilized with 0, 120, 300, 600, and 900 mg of N as 15N-labeled (NH4)2SO4 per pot (3 kg of soil). Half of the pots also received 15 g of corn (Zea mays) forage residue (1.05% N) mixed with the soil and half received none. Six clippings of forage and roots were harvested after the final clipping.

Total yield of dry forage and uptake of N were linear for all rates of applied N without residue and for the 300-, 600-, and 900-mg rates with applied residue. As estimated by linear regression from total N uptake, apparent recovery by six clippings of ryegrass plus roots, grown without residue, was 78% from Hartsells soil and 76% from Decatur. The corresponding slightly lower recoveries of 75 and 72% of the fertilizer N applied reflect uptake of soil N. Recoveries of fertilizer N were 90% from the Hartsells and 85% from the Decatur soil-plant systems. As estimated by difference, recoveries of fertilizer N by ryegrass increased, and recoveries from the plant-soil systems decreased with increase in amount of applied N.

Crop uptake of soil N increased as fertilizer N was depleted from the soils.

Addition of the carbonaceous residue caused apparent immobilization of 141 mg of fertilizer N in Hartsells and 164 mg in Decatur soil. Percentages of fertilizer N immobilized in the soils decreased, but actual amounts increased with increasing amount applied. A portion of the fertilizer N, independent of amount applied, was immobilized in each soil.


NOTES

1 Contribution from the Soils and Fertilizer Research Branch, National Fertilizer Development Center, TVA, Muscle Shoals, Alabama.

2 Agronomist and former Soil Chemist, now with Turf-Grass Specialties, Inc., Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

Received for publication June 16, 1967. Accepted for publication October 4, 1967.







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