Nitrogen Transfer in an Integrated System of Tilapia and Summer Bibb Lettuce

Nitrogen transfer from aquaculture to agriculture in integrated systems has been difficult to quantify, and the contribution of fish effluent to nitrogen utilization by crop plants is poorly documented. Therefore, labeled nitrogen, ¹⁵N, was used in a small scale integrated system in a controlled env...

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Main Authors: Azevedo, Celicina, Olsen, Mary W., Maughan, O. Eugene
Other Authors: Byrne, David N.
Language:en_US
Published: College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ) 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/219990
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2199902015-10-23T04:54:25Z Nitrogen Transfer in an Integrated System of Tilapia and Summer Bibb Lettuce Azevedo, Celicina Olsen, Mary W. Maughan, O. Eugene Byrne, David N. Baciewicz, Patti Agriculture -- Arizona Vegetables -- Arizona Nitrogen transfer from aquaculture to agriculture in integrated systems has been difficult to quantify, and the contribution of fish effluent to nitrogen utilization by crop plants is poorly documented. Therefore, labeled nitrogen, ¹⁵N, was used in a small scale integrated system in a controlled environment greenhouse to determine nitrogen transfer from the fish system and its utilization by plants. Tilapia fish were grown in m³ tanks and fed a complete diet that was amended with ¹⁵N ammonium sulfate. Fish effluent amended with ingredients of a basic nutrient solution and 0%, 25%, 50% and 100% of the recommended mineral nitrogen was used to irrigate Summer Bibb lettuce in 5 gal lysimeters in two trials. In trial 1, percent ¹⁵N recovered by lettuce was significantly higher in effluent amended with 50% mineral nitrogen as opposed to 0% or 100%. Dry weight of lettuce was significantly lower only when irrigated with effluent only (no mineral nitrogen added). In trial 2, percent ¹⁵N recovered by lettuce was significantly higher in effluent amended with 25% mineral nitrogen as opposed to 0% or 50%. In treatments with the same amount of mineral nitrogen added, addition of effluent did not affect dry weight. Although ¹⁵N recovery demonstrated efficient nitrogen transfer from the fish feed to the plants, results indicate that effluent alone does not supply sufficient nitrogen for lettuce production. 1999-10 text Article http://hdl.handle.net/10150/219990 Vegetable: A College of Agriculture Report en_US AZ1143 Series P-118 College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Agriculture -- Arizona
Vegetables -- Arizona
spellingShingle Agriculture -- Arizona
Vegetables -- Arizona
Azevedo, Celicina
Olsen, Mary W.
Maughan, O. Eugene
Nitrogen Transfer in an Integrated System of Tilapia and Summer Bibb Lettuce
description Nitrogen transfer from aquaculture to agriculture in integrated systems has been difficult to quantify, and the contribution of fish effluent to nitrogen utilization by crop plants is poorly documented. Therefore, labeled nitrogen, ¹⁵N, was used in a small scale integrated system in a controlled environment greenhouse to determine nitrogen transfer from the fish system and its utilization by plants. Tilapia fish were grown in m³ tanks and fed a complete diet that was amended with ¹⁵N ammonium sulfate. Fish effluent amended with ingredients of a basic nutrient solution and 0%, 25%, 50% and 100% of the recommended mineral nitrogen was used to irrigate Summer Bibb lettuce in 5 gal lysimeters in two trials. In trial 1, percent ¹⁵N recovered by lettuce was significantly higher in effluent amended with 50% mineral nitrogen as opposed to 0% or 100%. Dry weight of lettuce was significantly lower only when irrigated with effluent only (no mineral nitrogen added). In trial 2, percent ¹⁵N recovered by lettuce was significantly higher in effluent amended with 25% mineral nitrogen as opposed to 0% or 50%. In treatments with the same amount of mineral nitrogen added, addition of effluent did not affect dry weight. Although ¹⁵N recovery demonstrated efficient nitrogen transfer from the fish feed to the plants, results indicate that effluent alone does not supply sufficient nitrogen for lettuce production.
author2 Byrne, David N.
author_facet Byrne, David N.
Azevedo, Celicina
Olsen, Mary W.
Maughan, O. Eugene
author Azevedo, Celicina
Olsen, Mary W.
Maughan, O. Eugene
author_sort Azevedo, Celicina
title Nitrogen Transfer in an Integrated System of Tilapia and Summer Bibb Lettuce
title_short Nitrogen Transfer in an Integrated System of Tilapia and Summer Bibb Lettuce
title_full Nitrogen Transfer in an Integrated System of Tilapia and Summer Bibb Lettuce
title_fullStr Nitrogen Transfer in an Integrated System of Tilapia and Summer Bibb Lettuce
title_full_unstemmed Nitrogen Transfer in an Integrated System of Tilapia and Summer Bibb Lettuce
title_sort nitrogen transfer in an integrated system of tilapia and summer bibb lettuce
publisher College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
publishDate 1999
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/219990
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AT olsenmaryw nitrogentransferinanintegratedsystemoftilapiaandsummerbibblettuce
AT maughanoeugene nitrogentransferinanintegratedsystemoftilapiaandsummerbibblettuce
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