Register      Login
Soil Research Soil Research Society
Soil, land care and environmental research
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Carbon and nitrogen mineralisation in sand, silt, and clay fractions of soils under maize and pasture

R. L. Parfitt and G. J. Salt

Australian Journal of Soil Research 39(2) 361 - 371
Published: 2001

Abstract

Although several studies have quantified either C mineralisation or net N mineralisation in particle-size fractions, no work has examined simultaneous C and net N mineralisation. Therefore, we conducted an 18-week laboratory incubation to compare simultaneous mineralisation in sand, silt, and clay fractions. The soils (silt loams) were collected from fields of long-term pasture and maize. Sand, silt, and clay were separated by mild dispersion in water followed by centrifugation. Samples were incubated at 25°C in the dark in a quartz matrix, and were leached every 2 weeks with 0.004 M CaCl 2 at a suction of 20 kPa to remove soluble products. C mineralisation was determined from CO 2 -C evolved each 2 weeks, and mineral N was measured in the leachate. C mineralisation, on a C basis, followed the order sand > clay > silt, and was related (r 2 = 0.88) to the proportion of O-alkyl C (carbohydrate C) estimated from 13 C NMR. The low mineralisation in the silt may also have been a result of the physical protection of substrates in small pores in this fraction. The rates of N release were initially rapid from the maize soil fractions, and were consistent with the high initial mineral-N contents; subsequently, the rates were slower, and probably related to C mineralisation. For the pasture soil, N mineralisation followed the order clay>silt>sand, and was inversely related to the C: N ratios. Immobilisation appeared to take place in the sand fraction, whereas a large part of the net N mineralisation occurred in the clay fraction. There is now good evidence that rates of C and net N mineralisation differ within discrete particle size fractions, and data on such fractions could be useful for constructing soil organic matter models.

Keywords: aerobic incubation, dissolved organic carbon, New Zealand soils, texture.

https://doi.org/10.1071/SR00028

© CSIRO 2001

Committee on Publication Ethics


Rent Article (via Deepdyve) Export Citation Cited By (34) Get Permission

View Dimensions