Effects of Different Fertilizer and Irrigation Water Types, and Dissolved Organic Matter on Soil C and N Mineralization in Crop Rotation Farmland
2015
Shang, Fangze | Ren, Shumei | Yang, Peiling | Li, Changsheng | Ma, Ning
Inorganic N fertilizer and irrigation water types on the C and N dynamics are poorly understood. This work aimed to evaluate the effect of different N fertilizer and irrigation water types on soil C and N mineralization. The farmland experiment was conducted with three types of N fertilizer (urea, ammonium sulfate, and slow-release urea) and drip irrigation with two types of water (groundwater and reclaimed water) for a summer maize-winter wheat crop rotation. Soil samples were collected from the experimental farmland for incubation experiments. The results showed that the average cumulative mineralization of soil C (incubation 20 days) and N (incubation 14 weeks) in different treatments ranged from 73.50 to 91.37 mg kg⁻¹ and 52.65 to 64.04 mg kg⁻¹, respectively. N fertilization significantly increased dissolved organic carbon (DOC), dissolved organic nitrogen (DON), soil organic carbon (SOC), and soil organic nitrogen (SON) contents in the soils, but N fertilizer and irrigation water types had no significant influence on them. Correspondingly, N fertilization significantly enhanced the mineralization of C by 14.14–21.22 % and N by 15.81–22.16 % in soils but no significant difference among different N fertilizer types. Compared with groundwater, reclaimed water irrigation enhanced the mineralization of C by 3.33 % and N by 1.01 %, but the difference was not statistically significant. The cumulative mineralization of C and N in soils after DOM removal average significantly decreased 9.83 and 14.83 %, respectively, which indicates that DOM plays an important role in soil C and N mineralization. Our results indicate that inorganic N fertilization promotes soil C and N mineralization, which may inevitably aggravate global warning. Reclaimed water irrigation had similar influence on soil C and N mineralization as groundwater irrigation; thus, we recommend irrigation with reclaimed water in water shortage areas.
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