Plant nitrogen availability in selected Virginia soils

Surface and subsoil samples were collected from agriculturally important soils of Coastal Plain, Piedmont and Ridge and Valley regions of Virginia for the purpose of determining the contribution of different soil N fractions to plant available N. Soil samples were analyzed for exchangeable and non-e...

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Main Author: Baethgen, Walter E.
Other Authors: Agronomy
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/90907
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-909072020-09-26T05:35:22Z Plant nitrogen availability in selected Virginia soils Baethgen, Walter E. Agronomy LD5655.V855 1985.B337 Soils -- Nitrogen content -- Virginia Soils -- Nitrogen content -- Experiments Surface and subsoil samples were collected from agriculturally important soils of Coastal Plain, Piedmont and Ridge and Valley regions of Virginia for the purpose of determining the contribution of different soil N fractions to plant available N. Soil samples were analyzed for exchangeable and non-exchangeable NH₄⁺-N, NO₃⁻-N, total N, and organic matter contents. The samples were also subjected to the anaerobic incubation procedure as an index of organic N availability. Plant available N was measured by N uptake of successive wheat crops grown in the greenhouse. Multiple linear regression models for different groups of samples were used to determine the contribution of the different soil N fractions to the plant available N supply, and to predict N uptake by wheat. Best models were selected considering fit, significance of the regression coefficients, and predictive ability. Due to the high correlation among the different soil N fractions, important collinearity was present and affected the linear models. These effects were reduced by utilizing biased techniques. All the soils provided significant amounts of N to the wheat in both the first and second crops. Exchangeable NH₄⁺-N and NO₃⁻-N were the major initial sources of plant available N. Non-exchangeable NH₄⁺-N was also a significant contributor to the plant available N supply for most soils. The results of the biological and chemical indices of organic N availability were highly correlated among each other, and with plant N uptake by the first and second wheat crops. Plant N uptake was associated with the variation observed in the different soil N fractions, indicating that wheat is a good indicator crop for plant N availability experiments. The procedures used to detect and combat collinearity were effective in producing more stable models with better predictive ability. Further research should be conducted under field conditions to study the contribution of non-exchangeable NH₄⁺-N to plant N availability. M.S. 2019-07-03T16:42:29Z 2019-07-03T16:42:29Z 1985 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/90907 en_US OCLC# 12569883 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ viii, 127 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1985.B337
Soils -- Nitrogen content -- Virginia
Soils -- Nitrogen content -- Experiments
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1985.B337
Soils -- Nitrogen content -- Virginia
Soils -- Nitrogen content -- Experiments
Baethgen, Walter E.
Plant nitrogen availability in selected Virginia soils
description Surface and subsoil samples were collected from agriculturally important soils of Coastal Plain, Piedmont and Ridge and Valley regions of Virginia for the purpose of determining the contribution of different soil N fractions to plant available N. Soil samples were analyzed for exchangeable and non-exchangeable NH₄⁺-N, NO₃⁻-N, total N, and organic matter contents. The samples were also subjected to the anaerobic incubation procedure as an index of organic N availability. Plant available N was measured by N uptake of successive wheat crops grown in the greenhouse. Multiple linear regression models for different groups of samples were used to determine the contribution of the different soil N fractions to the plant available N supply, and to predict N uptake by wheat. Best models were selected considering fit, significance of the regression coefficients, and predictive ability. Due to the high correlation among the different soil N fractions, important collinearity was present and affected the linear models. These effects were reduced by utilizing biased techniques. All the soils provided significant amounts of N to the wheat in both the first and second crops. Exchangeable NH₄⁺-N and NO₃⁻-N were the major initial sources of plant available N. Non-exchangeable NH₄⁺-N was also a significant contributor to the plant available N supply for most soils. The results of the biological and chemical indices of organic N availability were highly correlated among each other, and with plant N uptake by the first and second wheat crops. Plant N uptake was associated with the variation observed in the different soil N fractions, indicating that wheat is a good indicator crop for plant N availability experiments. The procedures used to detect and combat collinearity were effective in producing more stable models with better predictive ability. Further research should be conducted under field conditions to study the contribution of non-exchangeable NH₄⁺-N to plant N availability. === M.S.
author2 Agronomy
author_facet Agronomy
Baethgen, Walter E.
author Baethgen, Walter E.
author_sort Baethgen, Walter E.
title Plant nitrogen availability in selected Virginia soils
title_short Plant nitrogen availability in selected Virginia soils
title_full Plant nitrogen availability in selected Virginia soils
title_fullStr Plant nitrogen availability in selected Virginia soils
title_full_unstemmed Plant nitrogen availability in selected Virginia soils
title_sort plant nitrogen availability in selected virginia soils
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/90907
work_keys_str_mv AT baethgenwaltere plantnitrogenavailabilityinselectedvirginiasoils
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