Nitrogen migration in crop rotations differing in fertilisation

Inappropriate use of nitrogen fertilisers is becoming a global problem; however, continuous fertilisation with N fertiliser ensures large and constant harvests. To evaluate the relationships of differently fertilised cultivated plant rotation with N metabolism in the agroecosystem the research was c...

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Main Authors: Saulius Guzys, Stefanija Miseviciene
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria 2015-06-01
Series:Spanish Journal of Agricultural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.inia.es/index.php/sjar/article/view/6672/2393
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spelling doaj-bfd6ca0d54034edb9656e961ad1b5d9a2020-11-24T22:27:09ZengInstituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y AlimentariaSpanish Journal of Agricultural Research1695-971X2171-92922015-06-01132e030310.5424/sjar/2015132-6672Nitrogen migration in crop rotations differing in fertilisation Saulius Guzys0Stefanija Miseviciene1Water Resources Engineering Institute, Aleksandras Stulginskis University, Universiteto 10, LT-53361 Akademija, Kaunas Distr., Lithuania Water Resources Engineering Institute, Aleksandras Stulginskis University, Universiteto 10, LT-53361 Akademija, Kaunas Distr., Lithuania Inappropriate use of nitrogen fertilisers is becoming a global problem; however, continuous fertilisation with N fertiliser ensures large and constant harvests. To evaluate the relationships of differently fertilised cultivated plant rotation with N metabolism in the agroecosystem the research was conducted between 2006 and 2013 at Lipliūnai, Lithuania, in fields with calcareous gley brown soil, i.e. Endocalcari Endohypogleyic Cambisol (CMg-n-w-can). The research area covered three drained plots where crop rotation of differently fertilised cereals and perennial grasses were applied. The greatest productivity was found in a higher fertilisation (TII, 843 kg N/ha) cereals crop rotation. With less fertilisation (TI, 540 kg N/ha) crop rotation productivity of cereals and perennial grasses (TIII, 218 kg N/ha) was 11-35% lower. The highest amount of mineral soil N (average 76 kg/ha) was found in TI. It was influenced by fertilisation (r=0.71) and crop productivity (r=0.39). TIII tended to reduce Nmin (12.1 mg/L) and Ntotal (12.8 mg/L) concentrations in drainage water and leaching of these elements (7 and 8 kg/ha). Nmin and Ntotal concentrations in the water depended on crop productivity respectively (r=0.48; r=0.36), quantity of mineral soil N (r=0.65; r=0.59), fertilisation (r=0.59; r=0.52), and N balance (r=0.26; r=0.35). Cereal crop rotation increased N leaching by 12-42%. The use of all crop rotations resulted in a negative N balance. Nitrogen balance depended on fertilisation with N fertiliser (r=0.55). The application of perennial grasses crop rotation in agricultural fields was the best environmental tool, reducing N migration to drainage. http://revistas.inia.es/index.php/sjar/article/view/6672/2393drainageleachingnitrogenbalanceyield
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saulius Guzys
Stefanija Miseviciene
spellingShingle Saulius Guzys
Stefanija Miseviciene
Nitrogen migration in crop rotations differing in fertilisation
Spanish Journal of Agricultural Research
drainage
leaching
nitrogen
balance
yield
author_facet Saulius Guzys
Stefanija Miseviciene
author_sort Saulius Guzys
title Nitrogen migration in crop rotations differing in fertilisation
title_short Nitrogen migration in crop rotations differing in fertilisation
title_full Nitrogen migration in crop rotations differing in fertilisation
title_fullStr Nitrogen migration in crop rotations differing in fertilisation
title_full_unstemmed Nitrogen migration in crop rotations differing in fertilisation
title_sort nitrogen migration in crop rotations differing in fertilisation
publisher Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria
series Spanish Journal of Agricultural Research
issn 1695-971X
2171-9292
publishDate 2015-06-01
description Inappropriate use of nitrogen fertilisers is becoming a global problem; however, continuous fertilisation with N fertiliser ensures large and constant harvests. To evaluate the relationships of differently fertilised cultivated plant rotation with N metabolism in the agroecosystem the research was conducted between 2006 and 2013 at Lipliūnai, Lithuania, in fields with calcareous gley brown soil, i.e. Endocalcari Endohypogleyic Cambisol (CMg-n-w-can). The research area covered three drained plots where crop rotation of differently fertilised cereals and perennial grasses were applied. The greatest productivity was found in a higher fertilisation (TII, 843 kg N/ha) cereals crop rotation. With less fertilisation (TI, 540 kg N/ha) crop rotation productivity of cereals and perennial grasses (TIII, 218 kg N/ha) was 11-35% lower. The highest amount of mineral soil N (average 76 kg/ha) was found in TI. It was influenced by fertilisation (r=0.71) and crop productivity (r=0.39). TIII tended to reduce Nmin (12.1 mg/L) and Ntotal (12.8 mg/L) concentrations in drainage water and leaching of these elements (7 and 8 kg/ha). Nmin and Ntotal concentrations in the water depended on crop productivity respectively (r=0.48; r=0.36), quantity of mineral soil N (r=0.65; r=0.59), fertilisation (r=0.59; r=0.52), and N balance (r=0.26; r=0.35). Cereal crop rotation increased N leaching by 12-42%. The use of all crop rotations resulted in a negative N balance. Nitrogen balance depended on fertilisation with N fertiliser (r=0.55). The application of perennial grasses crop rotation in agricultural fields was the best environmental tool, reducing N migration to drainage.
topic drainage
leaching
nitrogen
balance
yield
url http://revistas.inia.es/index.php/sjar/article/view/6672/2393
work_keys_str_mv AT sauliusguzys nitrogenmigrationincroprotationsdifferinginfertilisation
AT stefanijamiseviciene nitrogenmigrationincroprotationsdifferinginfertilisation
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