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Assessing the impact of long-term soil phosphorus on N-transformation pathways using 15N tracing
Date Issued
2021-01
Date Available
2020-12-14T12:13:22Z
Abstract
A laboratory incubation study was conducted on a temperate grassland soil to quantify the main mineral nitrogen (N) transformation rates and pathways via a15N tracing approach. Soil samples were taken from a long-term phosphorus (P) trial to investigate the effects on gross N-transformations under high and low phosphorus amendment. The soils were incubated over a 2-week period and treated with ammonium-nitrate (NH4NO3) which was applied to the soil both with and without a glucose amendment and labelled with 15N either on the ammonium (NH4+) or nitrate (NO3−) moiety at 50% atom enrichment. The results showed immobilisation to greatly outweigh mineralisation and that NO3− was predominantly produced via heterotrophic nitrification. Individual pathways for NO3− production were quantified including oxidation of NH4+, recalcitrant and labile organic N. Oxidation of labile organic N to NO3−, a newly considered pathway, accounted for between 63 and 83% of total NO3− production across the various treatments and P levels. This process was significantly higher in the low-P rather than the high-P soils (p < 0.05), highlighting the effect of soil P on the microbial community.
Sponsorship
Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine
Teagasc
Other Sponsorship
German Science foundation
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Elsevier
Journal
Soil Biology and Biochemistry
Volume
152
Copyright (Published Version)
2020 the Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0038-0717
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Name
1-s2.0-S003807172030362X-main.pdf
Size
1.66 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
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9ee7c845027c94727a56e48b464b8dd3
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