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ABSTRACT
A greenhouse pot experiment was conducted with various rates of manure (0, 20, 40, and 60 metric tons/ha) and sludge (0, 10, 20, and 30 metric tons/ha) combined factorially with 0, 50, 100, 150, and 200 mg N/kg soil as (NH4)2SO4 labeled with 15N, using barley and sudangrass as test crops. Most of the N from (NH4)2SO4 was recovered by the first cutting of barley forage (from 37.2 to 70.2%); the N from (NH4)2SO4 recovered by sudangrass, the last crop of the cropping sequence, ranged from 0.7 to 8.9%. No significant effect of both wastes and (NH4)2SO4 rates on the overall inorganic N fertilizer recovered by the crops was found. The difference method underestimated the (NH4)2SO4-N recoveries by the crops under sludge treatments. The depression in the mineralization rate of sludge by the (NH4)2SO4 applied was proposed to account for these discrepancies.
A fertilizer N balance, in which the sum of (NH4)2SO4-N removed by the crops plus the N accumulated in the soil was subtracted from the (NH4)2SO4-N input, was used to estimate the fertilizer N losses. These losses were 7.8, 9.1, and 13.1%, respectively, for control (unamended), manure and sludge treatments.
With increasing rates of (NH4)2SO4, the nitrogen "A" values defined as the N available in the soil in terms of N from (NH4)2SO4, increased in the control, remained almost constant with manure, and decreased with sludge treatments.
1 Contribution from the Dept. of Soil and Environ. Sci., Univ. of Calif., Riverside, CA 92521.
2 Formerly Graduate Student, now Researcher in the Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Agrarias, Moncada (Valencia), Spain, and Professor of Soil Science, Univ. of Calif., Riverside, respectively.
Received for publication January 12, 1978. Accepted for publication May 19, 1978.
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