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Influence of Soil Fertility Management on Nitrogen Mineralization, Urease Activity and Maize Yield

Kalala, Daniel M.; Shitumbanuma, Victor; Chishala, Benson H.; Mweetwa, Alice M. and Fliessbach, Andreas (2022) Influence of Soil Fertility Management on Nitrogen Mineralization, Urease Activity and Maize Yield. Journal of Agricultural Science, 14 (2), pp. 1-15.

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Summary

For studying the effect of soil fertility management practices on N mineralization, urease activity and maize yield, replicated field trials were established in 2015 at Misamfu and Msekera agricultural research stations (ARS) representing two geo-climatic regions of Zambia. The soil at Msekera ARS is a sandy clay loam (SCL) from a Paleustult, while that at Misamfu is a loamy sand (LS) from a Kandiustult. The field trials had three categories of treatments namely legumes, traditional and conventional. The legumes group consisted of researcher-recommended legume-cereal intercrop systems of maize with Cajanus cajan, Crotalaria juncea and Tephrosia vogelii in combination with compound D (10% N, 20% P2O5, 10% K2O) and urea (46% N) at the recommended rate (200 kg ha-1) and half of the recommended rate (100 kg ha-1). Composted cattle manure and Fundikila, a special plant biomass management technique, were the inputs under the traditional category. The conventional category consisted of a treatment to which only chemical fertilizer was applied. Urease activity was determined in surface soil samples (0-20 cm) collected from the field trials after 3 years. For N mineralization, a laboratory incubation study was conducted over 13 weeks. For the laboratory incubation, an additional treatment to which no input was applied was included as control. Application of organic inputs significantly increased the potentially mineralizable N (No) by 127% to 256% on the LS and by 51% to 131% on the SCL in comparison to the control. Similarly, the cumulative N mineralized (Ncum) was twice or thrice higher where organic inputs had been applied in comparison to the control. The No followed the order traditional > legumes > conventional > control, while the mineralization rate constant (k) followed the order legumes > conventional > traditional > control on both soils. The rate of N mineralization was significantly higher on the LS than the SCL. Higher rates of chemical fertilizer resulted in high Ncum and higher maize yield. Maize yield was significantly and positively correlated to Ncum, but inversely correlated to the amount of applied N that was mineralized (%Nmin). Urease activity was stimulated by application of organic inputs and suppressed by higher rates of chemical fertilizers. The type of organic inputs; the rate of chemical fertilizers; and soil texture are factors influencing N mineralization and maize yield. Urease activity was largely influenced by the rate of chemical fertilizer, but not the type of organic inputs or soil texture.


EPrint Type:Journal paper
Keywords:Organic inputs, chemical fertilizer, Abacus, FiBL10082
Agrovoc keywords:
Language
Value
URI
English
nitrogen mineralization
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_36243
English
urease
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_8092
Subjects: Soil > Soil quality
Crop husbandry > Composting and manuring
Crop husbandry > Production systems > Root crops
Research affiliation:Other countries
Switzerland > FiBL - Research Institute of Organic Agriculture Switzerland > Soil > Soil fertility
ISSN:1916-9752
DOI:10.5539/jas.v14n2p9
Deposited By: Caminada, Lena
ID Code:44835
Deposited On:12 Dec 2022 09:14
Last Modified:12 Dec 2022 09:14
Document Language:English
Status:Published
Refereed:Peer-reviewed and accepted

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