Ammonia volatilization following urea application at maize fields in the East African highlands with different soil properties
2018
Zheng, Jinsen | Kilasara, MethodM. | Mmari, WilliamN. | Funakawa, Shinya
Use of nitrogen (N) fertilizer is underway to increase in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). The effect of increasing N rates on ammonia (NH₃) volatilization—a main pathway of applied-N loss in cropping systems—has not been evaluated in this region. In two soils (Alfisols, ALF; and Andisols, AND) with maize crop in the East African highlands, we measured NH₃ volatilization following urea broadcast at six rates (0–150 kg N ha⁻¹) for 17 days, using a semi-open static chamber method. Immediate irrigation and urea deep placement were tested as mitigation treatments. The underlying mechanism was assessed by monitoring soil pH and mineral N (NH₄⁺ and NO₃⁻) concentrations. More cumulative NH₃-N was volatilized in ALF than in AND at the same urea-N rate. Generally, higher urea-N rates increased proportional NH₃-N loss (percent of applied N loss as NH₃-N). Based on well-fitted sigmoid models, simple surface urea application is not recommended for ALF, while up to 60 kg N ha⁻¹ could be adopted for AND soils. The susceptibility of ALF to NH₃ loss mainly resulted from its low pH buffering capacity, low cation exchange capacity, and high urease activity. Both mitigation treatments were effective. The inhibited rise of soil pH but not NH₄⁺ concentration was the main reason for the mitigated NH₃-N losses, although nitrification in the irrigation treatment might also have contributed. Our results showed that in acidic soils common to SSA croplands, proportional NH₃-N loss can be substantial even at a low urea-N rate; and that the design of mitigation treatments should consider the soil’s inherent capacity to buffer NH₃ loss.
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