TY - JOUR
T1 - Carbon, nitrogen and sulphur cycling following incorporation of canola residue of different sizes into a nutrient-poor sandy soil
AU - Singh, B.
AU - Rengel, Zed
AU - Bowden, J.W.
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - No information is available on the role of particle size of canola (Brassica napus) residue in altering C mineralization and nutrient (N, S) cycling in soil. We studied decomposition of canola residue (at 20 +/- 1 degrees C temperature and 10% moisture (w/w) for 6 months to elucidate the effect of its particle size (< 1, 5-7, and 20-25 mm) on dynamics of C, N and S turnover following incorporation into a nutrient-poor sandy soil. Averaged over time, particle size of canola residue did not significantly affect C mineralization rate, the size of microbial-C and microbial-N pools, or the extent of CaCl2-extractable S immobilization, but altered the extent of mineral-N (NH4+, NO3-) immobilization and watersoluble organic C (W-SOC) depletion. A rapid decrease in C mineralization rate in the first week matched the rapid depletion of W-SOC, especially for the < 1 mm residue treatment. Over 6 months, mineral-N in the amended soils rarely increased beyond the starting level (0.8-1 mg kg(-1) soil for all the treatments), whereas nitrate-N increased 19-fold in the non-amended soil. This suggests an occurrence of strong N immobilization in the amended soils; such immobilization was high for the < 1 mm residue treatment. On a cumulative basis, 33-35% of C added in canola residues to the soil was respired in 6 months. The microbial-C and microbial-N pools peaked by day 4 for all the residue treatments (compared to time zero, 58-122% increase for microbial-C and 36-57% for microbial-N). Averaged over time, amended soils contained approx. 40% more microbial-C and microbial-N than the non-amended soil. An addition of canola residue (regardless of the size) to soil increased the extractable S significantly (3.4-fold) on day 0; this initially increased S level decreased by one-third over 6 months. In conclusion, particle size of canola residue did not affect temporal pattern of C and S mineralization in a nutrient-poor sandy soil, but altered N cycling. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
AB - No information is available on the role of particle size of canola (Brassica napus) residue in altering C mineralization and nutrient (N, S) cycling in soil. We studied decomposition of canola residue (at 20 +/- 1 degrees C temperature and 10% moisture (w/w) for 6 months to elucidate the effect of its particle size (< 1, 5-7, and 20-25 mm) on dynamics of C, N and S turnover following incorporation into a nutrient-poor sandy soil. Averaged over time, particle size of canola residue did not significantly affect C mineralization rate, the size of microbial-C and microbial-N pools, or the extent of CaCl2-extractable S immobilization, but altered the extent of mineral-N (NH4+, NO3-) immobilization and watersoluble organic C (W-SOC) depletion. A rapid decrease in C mineralization rate in the first week matched the rapid depletion of W-SOC, especially for the < 1 mm residue treatment. Over 6 months, mineral-N in the amended soils rarely increased beyond the starting level (0.8-1 mg kg(-1) soil for all the treatments), whereas nitrate-N increased 19-fold in the non-amended soil. This suggests an occurrence of strong N immobilization in the amended soils; such immobilization was high for the < 1 mm residue treatment. On a cumulative basis, 33-35% of C added in canola residues to the soil was respired in 6 months. The microbial-C and microbial-N pools peaked by day 4 for all the residue treatments (compared to time zero, 58-122% increase for microbial-C and 36-57% for microbial-N). Averaged over time, amended soils contained approx. 40% more microbial-C and microbial-N than the non-amended soil. An addition of canola residue (regardless of the size) to soil increased the extractable S significantly (3.4-fold) on day 0; this initially increased S level decreased by one-third over 6 months. In conclusion, particle size of canola residue did not affect temporal pattern of C and S mineralization in a nutrient-poor sandy soil, but altered N cycling. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
U2 - 10.1016/j.soilbio.2005.03.025
DO - 10.1016/j.soilbio.2005.03.025
M3 - Article
SN - 0038-0717
VL - 38
SP - 32
EP - 42
JO - Soil Biology and Biochemistry
JF - Soil Biology and Biochemistry
IS - 1
ER -