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Journal ArticleDOI

Nitrogen Mineralization Potentials of Soils

George Stanford, +1 more
- 01 May 1972 - 
- Vol. 36, Iss: 3, pp 465-472
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TLDR
In this paper, a 30-week period at 35C, using incubation intervals of 2, 2, 4, 6, 8, and 8 weeks, was used to determine the net mineralization of 39 widely differing soils.
Abstract
Net mineralization of N in 39 widely differing soils was determined over a 30-week period at 35C, using incubation intervals of 2, 2, 4, 4, 4, 6, and 8 weeks. Mineral N was leached from the soils before the first incubation and following each of seven incubations by means of 0.01M CaCl₂ and a minus-N nutrient solution. Soil water contents were adjusted by applying suction (60 cm Hg), and losses of water during incubation under aerobic conditions were negligible. With most soils, cumulative net N mineralized was linearly related to the square root of time, t½. The pH of soils changed very little in the course of 30 weeks' incubation. Because of the generally consistent results, the data were employed in calculating the N mineralization potential, Nₒ, of each soil, based on the hypothesis that rate of N mineralization was proportional to the quantity of N comprising the mineralizable substrate. Values of Nₒ ranged from about 20 to over 300 ppm of air-dry soil. The fraction of total N comprising Nₒ varied widely (5 to 40%) among soils. Mineralization rate constants did not differ significantly among most of the soils. The most reliable estimate of the rate constant, k was .054 ± .009 week⁻¹. The time required to mineralize one-half of Nₒ, t½, was estimated to be 12.8 ± 2.2 weeks. Results suggest that the forms of organic N contributing to Nₒ were similar for most of the soils.

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Seasonal changes in soil microbial biomass and mineralizable c and n in wheat management systems

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C mineralization and microbial activity in four biochar field experiments several years after incorporation

TL;DR: In this article, soil was sampled from biochar-amended and control plots of four biochar field trials at Lincoln (UK), Rivignano, Rocca Bernarda and Beano in Italy.
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Spatial relationships of soil microbial biomass and C and N Mineralization in a semi-arid shrub-steppe ecosystem

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured inorganic N pools, microbial biomass and C and N mineralization potentials (C o, N o ) from 205 soil samples positioned around five Artemisia tridentata shrub plants.
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Agricultural use of treated sewage effluents: agronomic and environmental implications and perspectives for brazil

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A coupled soil water and nitrogen balance model for flooded rice fields in India

TL;DR: A simple model for assessing concentration of nitrate in water percolating out of the flooded rice (Oryza sativa) fields is presented in this article, which is based on coupling of soil water and N-balance models.