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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 59:1052-1058 (1995)
© 1995 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Nitrogen Turnover by Sequential Immobilization and Mineralization during Residue Decomposition in Soils

A. M. Blackmer* and C. J. Green

Department of Agronomy, Iowa State Univ., Ames, IA 50011

*Corresponding author (ablackmr{at}iastate.edu).

ABSTRACT

Additions of 15N-labeled fertilizers to soils often induce mineralization of nonlabeled N, and such mineralization poses problems when interpreting the results of isotopic analyses. We studied the effects of added 15NO3 on turnover of N during the decomposition of corn (Zea mays L.) residues in soils. Samples of a Galva silty clay loam (fine-silty, mixed, mesic Typic Hapludoll) were treated with various levels of corn stover and various levels of 15N-labeled NO3 and were incubated for 90 d. Evolution of CO2 and concentrations and isotopic composition of NO3 were monitored. Increases in rates of NO3 addition increased initial rates of immobilization of labeled N and subsequent rates of mineralization of nonlabeled N. The sequential immobilization of labeled N and mineralization of nonlabeled N resulted in substantial replacement of labeled NO3 by nonlabeled NO3. Early added-N-induced immobilization of labeled N often was offset by subsequent added-N-induced mineralization of nonlabeled N before the end of the study. Sequential immobilization and mineralization should be recognized as a potential source of error in 15N-tracer studies because sequential processes violate the commonly held assumptions that mineralization and immobilization occur simultaneously. This error could be avoided by recognizing that sequential immobilization and mineralization can occur and that the sequential processes result in a different distribution of isotopes than does simultaneous mineralization-immobilization turnover.


NOTES

Journal Paper no. J-15788 of the Iowa Agric. and Home Economics Exp. Stn., Ames. Project no. 2995. This work was supported in part by Cooperative Agreement no. CX820311 between the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Iowa Department of Natural Resources and in part by the Integrated Farm Management Demonstration Program of the Agricultural Energy Management Fund, state of Iowa, through the Iowa Dep. of Agriculture and Land Stewardship.

Received for publication May 9, 1994.


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