Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2025165 Soil Biology and Biochemistry 2011 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

The N extracted after chloroform (CHCl3) fumigation was determined as a possible index of soil N supply to plants. The relationships between extractable N following fumigation and reference indices such as total N, alkali-hydrolyzable N, N released by the Stanford short-term incubation method, and the N extracted by KCl and by CaCl2, were measured in nine soils of differing soil N supply capacity. A highly significant correlation was achieved between the extractable N released by fumigation and the N released by the Stanford method, i.e. a short-term aerobic incubation (r = 0.87). Similarly, the correlation between extractable N by fumigation and the N uptake by ryegrass was highly statistically significant (r = 0.93). Using the N extracted following fumigation has the advantage that laboratory results are available in two days and are both reproducible and of high precision. Therefore, the N extracted following fumigation is a valid, timesaving and precise index of soil N supply capacity.

► Significant correlation: N released by Stanford method and CHCl3 fumigation. ► Significant correlation: extractable N by fumigation and ryegrass N uptake. ► The N extracted following fumigation is a valid index of soil N availability.

Keywords
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Soil Science
Authors
, , , , , ,