Nitrogen dynamics as a function of soil types, compaction, and moisture

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Abstract

In this study, the complex interactions between soil types, compaction, and moisture on nitrogen (N) transformation processes such as ammonia (NH3) volatilization, ammonification, nitrification, and denitrification were examined over a 30-day period using a simulated column approach. Two soil types: loam, and sandy loam, were subjected to three compaction treatments-control, surface, and sub-surface compaction-And two moisture regimes, dry and wet. Liquid urea ammonium nitrate (32-0-0) was used as the N fertilizer source at a rate of 200 kg N ha-1. Key indicators of N transformations were measured, including residual concentrations of ammonium (NH4-N) and nitrate (NO3-N), NO3-N leaching, NH3 volatilization, and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions. Findings revealed that compaction significantly increased residual NH4-N concentrations in deeper soil profiles, with the highest 190.80 mg kg-1 recorded in loam soil under sub-surface compaction and dry conditions. Nitrification rates decreased across both soil types due to compaction, evidenced by elevated residual NH-4N levels. Increased NO-3N leaching was observed in loam soil (178.06 mg L-1), greater than sandy loam (81.11 mg L-1), due to initial higher residual NO-3 in loam soil. The interaction of compaction and moisture most affected N2O emissions, with the highest emissions in control treatments during dry weather at 2.88 kg ha-1. Additionally, higher NH3 volatilization was noted in moist sandy loam soil under control conditions at 19.64 kg ha-1. These results highlight the necessity of considering soil texture, moisture, and compaction in implementing sustainable N management strategies in agriculture and suggest recommendations such as avoiding broadcast application in moist sandy loam and loam soil to mitigate NH3 volatilization and enhance N use efficiency, as well as advocating for readjustment of fertilizer rate based on organic matter content to reduce potential NO-3N leaching and N2O emissions, particularly in loam soil. Copyright:

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Das, S., Mohapatra, A., Sahu, K., Panday, D., Ghimire, D., & Maharjan, B. (2024). Nitrogen dynamics as a function of soil types, compaction, and moisture. PLoS ONE, 19(4 April). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0301296

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