Spring barley yield and nitrogen recovery after application of peat manure and pig slurry

The effectiveness of peat manure, manufactured of pig slurry and moderately humified Sphagnum peat (slurry:peat ca. 1:1.5 v/v), as nitrogen (N) source for spring barley was investigated in a four.year field experiment on a clay loam soil in south-western Finland. Pig slurry, NPK fertilizer and plain...

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Main Author: P. K. MATTILA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scientific Agricultural Society of Finland 2008-12-01
Series:Agricultural and Food Science
Online Access:https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5836
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spelling doaj-5b6cf88318194c99b1e3eeaeabd0e2d02020-11-24T23:57:33ZengScientific Agricultural Society of FinlandAgricultural and Food Science1459-60671795-18952008-12-01152 Spring barley yield and nitrogen recovery after application of peat manure and pig slurryP. K. MATTILAThe effectiveness of peat manure, manufactured of pig slurry and moderately humified Sphagnum peat (slurry:peat ca. 1:1.5 v/v), as nitrogen (N) source for spring barley was investigated in a four.year field experiment on a clay loam soil in south-western Finland. Pig slurry, NPK fertilizer and plain peat were used as references. Manures were incorporated before sowing or surface-applied after sowing in spring at an ammoniacal N rate of.54.106 kg.ha-1 with or without supplementary NPK fertilizer (40.kg N.ha-1). Soil moisture conditions were varied by different irrigation treatments. Peat manure produced 5.15% higher grain yields than pig slurry, with the largest difference after surface application. Incorporation was more important for slurry than for peat manure in increasing N uptake and yield. Soil moisture deficit in spring and early summer limited the availability of manure N. Part of the manure N that was not available in the early growing period was apparently taken up by the crop later. Consequently, N concentration tended to be higher with lower yields, and differences in the recovery of manure N were smaller than the differences in grain yield. Supplementation of manures with inorganic fertilizer N increased yield by 37%, on average, and improved the N recovery.;https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5836
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author P. K. MATTILA
spellingShingle P. K. MATTILA
Spring barley yield and nitrogen recovery after application of peat manure and pig slurry
Agricultural and Food Science
author_facet P. K. MATTILA
author_sort P. K. MATTILA
title Spring barley yield and nitrogen recovery after application of peat manure and pig slurry
title_short Spring barley yield and nitrogen recovery after application of peat manure and pig slurry
title_full Spring barley yield and nitrogen recovery after application of peat manure and pig slurry
title_fullStr Spring barley yield and nitrogen recovery after application of peat manure and pig slurry
title_full_unstemmed Spring barley yield and nitrogen recovery after application of peat manure and pig slurry
title_sort spring barley yield and nitrogen recovery after application of peat manure and pig slurry
publisher Scientific Agricultural Society of Finland
series Agricultural and Food Science
issn 1459-6067
1795-1895
publishDate 2008-12-01
description The effectiveness of peat manure, manufactured of pig slurry and moderately humified Sphagnum peat (slurry:peat ca. 1:1.5 v/v), as nitrogen (N) source for spring barley was investigated in a four.year field experiment on a clay loam soil in south-western Finland. Pig slurry, NPK fertilizer and plain peat were used as references. Manures were incorporated before sowing or surface-applied after sowing in spring at an ammoniacal N rate of.54.106 kg.ha-1 with or without supplementary NPK fertilizer (40.kg N.ha-1). Soil moisture conditions were varied by different irrigation treatments. Peat manure produced 5.15% higher grain yields than pig slurry, with the largest difference after surface application. Incorporation was more important for slurry than for peat manure in increasing N uptake and yield. Soil moisture deficit in spring and early summer limited the availability of manure N. Part of the manure N that was not available in the early growing period was apparently taken up by the crop later. Consequently, N concentration tended to be higher with lower yields, and differences in the recovery of manure N were smaller than the differences in grain yield. Supplementation of manures with inorganic fertilizer N increased yield by 37%, on average, and improved the N recovery.;
url https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5836
work_keys_str_mv AT pkmattila springbarleyyieldandnitrogenrecoveryafterapplicationofpeatmanureandpigslurry
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