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Nitrogen fertiliser value of digestates and untreated cattle slurry differs in organic and conventional crop management

Reimer, Marie and Sørensen, Peter (2023) Nitrogen fertiliser value of digestates and untreated cattle slurry differs in organic and conventional crop management. In: RAMIRAN 2023 book of abstracts, p. 24.

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Summary in the original language of the document

Introduction
One main obstacle to sustainable nutrient management in organic farming is the scarcity of nutrients. Further, commonly used nutrient sources in organic farming like composts or straw-rich animal manure show low nitrogen (N) fertilizer value. Anaerobic co-digestion of animal manures with biomass from green manures could increase the N fertilizer value of the animal manures while the addition of green manure would result in a higher quantity of fertilizers available in organic farming. Yet, studies investigating N fertilizer values under organic management are scarce. Therefore, this study aimed to determine the N fertilizer value of different products from anaerobic digestion (digestates, separated liquid fraction of digestates) as well as cattle manure and mineral fertilization under organic management. In addition, the difference in fertilizer value due to application timing (before vs. after ploughing) and crop management (organic vs. conventional) was tested.
Methodology
Two field studies were performed on loamy sand soil at the research station Foulumgaard (56o49’N, 09o58’E). Study 1 compared the effect of digestates (co-digestion of cattle slurry and clover grass silage), and liquid fraction from separated digestates with the effect of an unfertilized control, cattle slurry, and mineral fertilization on spring barley yield in two consecutive years under organic management. Study 2 investigated the differences in the fertilizer value of digestates (2on cattle slurry), and cattle slurry due to application timing (before vs. after ploughing), N dose (100 vs. 200 kg N ha-1), and management (organic vs. conventional) in spring barley. The fertilizer value was calculated as N fertilizer replacement value (NFRV) for grain N and total N yield. NFRV is estimated as shown in the equations belowfrom the N use efficiency (NUE) of manures relative to NUE of mineral fertilizer N (determined as the slope of the mineral N response curve).
(1) NUE=(Nuptake fertilized – Nuptake unfertilized)/Napplied*100% (2) NFRV=NUEmanure/NUEmineral*100%
Results and discussion
Study 1 revealed that cattle slurry, digestates, and the liquid digestates fraction had all high NFRV between 80% and 90% (based on grain N yield under organic management). Hence, co-digestion of cattle slurry with biomass from green manures can increase the quantity of digestates without lowering the quality. Within the nutrient-limited system of arable organic farming, this could increase the nutrient supply and also be a meaningful use of the biomass from green manures. The separation of the liquid fraction did not result in a higher NFRV. However, it lowered the phosphorous content relative to the N content which can prevent nutrient imbalances, when digestates are used as the only source of N. Study 2 revealed an increase of > 10% points NFRV due to anaerobic digestion (cattle slurry vs. digestate; F(1,49)=96.00, p<0.001). It also showed that injection after ploughing compared to injection before ploughing, as often done in practice, can considerably increase the NFRV independent of the kind of fertilizer by around 8% points (F(1,49)=24.82, p<0.001). This was probably due to a placement effect when the slurry band was untouched after injection. Further, the estimated NFRV was 13% points higher by organic than conventional management (F(1,3)=36.11, p=0.009) which could have caused the relatively high NFRV measured in study 1. It can be explained by a 12% points lower NUE of mineral fertilization under organic management compared to conventional management (t30=7.06, p<0.001). Yet, the NUE of cattle slurry and digestates were not affected by the type of management (t22=1.37, p=0.19 and t22=0.54, p=0.60, respectively).
Conclusion
Anaerobic digestion can be a valid tool for increasing nutrient efficiency and availability in organic farming. However, when it comes to evaluating the NFRV of organic manures, the application technique and the management of the experiment should be considered. Further research is needed to determine the reasons for a reduced NUE of mineral fertilization while organic manures seemed to be unaffected.
Acknowledgements
This research was conducted within the ClimOptic project financed by ICROFS Organic RDD 4 through the Green Development and Demonstration Programme under the Danish Ministry of Environment and Food.


EPrint Type:Conference paper, poster, etc.
Type of presentation:Speech
Agrovoc keywords:
Language
Value
URI
English
nitrogen use efficiency -> nitrogen-use efficiency
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_fd20296f
English
digestate
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_4af94ce2
English
organic agriculture
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_15911
English
fertilizer application
UNSPECIFIED
Subjects: Crop husbandry > Composting and manuring
Soil > Nutrient turnover
Farming Systems > Farm nutrient management
Research affiliation: Denmark > Organic RDD 4 > ClimOptic
Deposited By: Reimer, Marie
ID Code:53590
Deposited On:05 Aug 2024 06:40
Last Modified:05 Aug 2024 06:40
Document Language:English
Status:Published
Refereed:Peer-reviewed and accepted

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