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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 44:514-517 (1980)
© 1980 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Fate of Tagged Nitrogen Fertilizer Applied to Irrigated Corn1

R. V. Olson2

ABSTRACT

A field experiment was conducted for 2 years with ammonium sulfate tagged with 5.93 atom % 15N to determine the fate of N fertilizer applied to sprinkler-irrigated corn (Zea mays L.). All areas of triplicate, 356-cm square plots were treated with 50 or 150 kg tagged N/ha. N fertilizer used by the crop and that remaining in the top 240 cm of soil were measured. NH4+-N and NO3--N in the 0- to 10-cm layers after the second harvest also were determined. Grain yields in 1976 did not differ significantly. In 1977 response to N was significant, but responses to two N rates did not differ significantly.

Only about one-fourth of the N fertilizer at either rate was removed by the grain. Amounts in the soil were in proportion to amounts applied and about three times more after 2 years than 1 year, reflecting the N in crop residue from the first crop. The N balance indicated losses from the system of 17 to 18% of the N applied during the 2 years, after correcting for apparent errors. Fertilizer did not significantly alter amounts of soil N used by the crop but total N uptake increased with each fertilizer increment. There was no priming effect on mineralization of indigenous soil N. Comparng the 15N and difference methods for calculating fertilizer N uptake showed that the difference method varied more and showed significantly less uptake in one case.

From 65 to 73% of the N fertilizer remaining in the soil was in the 0- to 10-cm layer. Depth of movement was related to amount applied, varying from 20 cm with 50 kg after 1 year to 240 cm with 150 kg applied each year for 2 years. Some of the N with the 150-kg rate may have leached below 240 cm after 2 years, but there appeared to be no leaching from the measured zone in other cases so losses from the system must have been by denitrification.

Most of the N fertilizer in the 0- to 10 cm-layer after 2 years was immobilized with only 4.4 to 4.7% remaining in the NH4+ and NO3- forms. However, there was about seven times more inorganic N in the soil originating from fertilizer than came from indigenous soil N, which confirms that residual fertilizer N is more likely than indigenous N to be present in inorganic forms.

Amounts of fertilizer N found in grain and lost were proportional to amounts applied. The 150 kg N/ha rate gave no higher grain yields than 50 kg N/ha rate, but resulted in much greater crop removal, gaseous loss, and downward movement into the soil profile.


NOTES

1 Contribution 80-141-J, Dep. of Agronomy, Kansas Agric. Exp. Stn., Manhattan, KS 66506.

2 Professor of Agronomy.

Received for publication October 24, 1979. Accepted for publication February 11, 1980.




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