Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://nswdpe.intersearch.com.au/nswdpejspui/handle/1/20226
Title: Nitrogen losses by denitrification can be large from waterlogged Vertosols growing sorghum
Other Titles: Northern NSW research results 2015
Authors: Schwenke, Graeme
Haigh, Bruce
Keywords: 2012, 2013, denirification, nitrogen loss, nitrogen rate, Romney Vale, side banded, sorghum, Tamworth, vertosol, vertosol, waterlogging
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: Department of Primary Industries
Abstract: Key findings • Denitrification can lead to a significant loss of fertiliser nitrogen if soils become waterlogged after heavy rain. Waterlogging depletes the soil of oxygen, so microorganisms use nitrate instead of O2 as an electron‑acceptor, converting nitrate to the gases nitric oxide, nitrous oxide and di‑nitrogen. • We used 15N isotope‑labelled urea to trace the fate of urea applied at sowing to field‑grown sorghum. Trials were located on black Vertosol soils at two sites – near Tamworth and Quirindi – in the 2012–13 summer season. • In‑crop rainfall was above average for part of the season at the Tamworth site, but well above average at the Quirindi site. • Between 12 and 45% of the N applied as 15N urea in 2012–13 was not recovered in either soil or plant samples, so was presumed lost through denitrification.
URI: https://nswdpe.intersearch.com.au/nswdpejspui/handle/1/20226
ISSN: 2208-8199
Appears in Collections:DPI Agriculture - Southern and Northern Research Results [2011-present]

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