Citation Information

  • Title : A long-term nitrogen fertilizer gradient has little effect on soil organic matter in a high-intensity maize production system
  • Source : Global Change Biology
  • Publisher : Wiley
  • Volume : 20
  • Issue : 4
  • Pages : 1339-1350
  • Year : 2014
  • DOI : 10.1111/gcb.1251
  • ISBN : 10.1111/gcb.12519
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Castellano, M. J.
    • Sawyer, J. E.
    • Jeske, E. S.
    • Hofmockel, K. S.
    • Drijber, R. A.
    • Bach, E. M.
    • Brown, K. H.
  • Climates: Hot summer continental (Dsa, Dfa, Dwa).
  • Cropping Systems: Continuous cropping. Maize. Till cropping systems.
  • Countries: USA.

Summary

Global maize production alters an enormous soil organic C (SOC) stock, ultimately affecting greenhouse gas concentrations and the capacity of agroecosystems to buffer climate variability. Inorganic N fertilizer is perhaps the most important factor affecting SOC within maize-based systems due to its effects on crop residue production and SOC mineralization. Using a continuous maize cropping system with a 13 year N fertilizer gradient (0-269kg Nha(-1)yr(-1)) that created a large range in crop residue inputs (3.60-9.94 Mgdry matter ha(-1)yr(-1)), we provide the first agronomic assessment of long-term N fertilizer effects on SOC with direct reference to N rates that are empirically determined to be insufficient, optimum, and excessive. Across the N fertilizer gradient, SOC in physico-chemically protected pools was not affected by N fertilizer rate or residue inputs. However, unprotected particulate organic matter (POM) fractions increased with residue inputs. Although N fertilizer was negatively linearly correlated with POM C/N ratios, the slope of this relationship decreased from the least decomposed POM pools (coarse POM) to the most decomposed POM pools (fine intra-aggregate POM). Moreover, C/N ratios of protected pools did not vary across N rates, suggesting little effect of N fertilizer on soil organic matter (SOM) after decomposition of POM. Comparing a N rate within 4% of agronomic optimum (208kg Nha(-1)yr(-1)) and an excessive N rate (269kg Nha(-1)yr(-1)), there were no differences between SOC amount, SOM C/N ratios, or microbial biomass and composition. These data suggest that excessive N fertilizer had little effect on SOM and they complement agronomic assessments of environmental N losses, that demonstrate N2O and NO3 emissions exponentially increase when agronomic optimum N is surpassed.

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