Title of article
Hydropedological processes and their implications for nitrogen availability to corn
Author/Authors
Q. Zhu، نويسنده , , J. P. Schmidt، نويسنده , , H. S. Lin، نويسنده , , R. P. Sripada، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
12
From page
111
To page
122
Abstract
Hydropedological processes affect soil water and nutrient transport and cycling. This study evaluated the impact of hydropedological properties on soil N availability and corn (Zea mays L.) growth in three areas within the same field representing distinguishing but typical mid-Atlantic (USA) landforms. These areas included: a depressional area (Site A), a steep (14%) slope area (Site B), and a flood plain area with 1% slope (Site C); different soil types (Hagerstown, Opequon, and Melvin series, respectively); and varying hydrological features (soil water content, matric potential, and subsurface flow) in a Ridge and Valley agricultural landscape. A small-plot replicated study was conducted in each of these three areas, including four blocks of two N treatments (NH4NO3) applied to corn at planting (0 and 150 kg N ha− 1). Soil and above-ground plant biomass samples were collected during the growing season and grain yield was determined at harvest. Site A had the greatest mean grain yield (fertilized: 8.5 Mg ha− 1; control: 4.5 Mg ha− 1) and above-ground plant biomass (at physiological maturity or PM, fertilized: 11.7 Mg ha− 1; control: 7.1 Mg ha− 1), probably due to the fine-textured (> 19% clay) and low saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ksat 20% sand), and deep subsurface lateral convergent flow (0.7 m below the surface). Understanding these types of relationships between corn response to N fertilizer and hydropedological features will improve N management decisions for corn production.
Keywords
Matric potential , soil texture , Soil water content , subsurface flow , Yield , Precision agriculture
Journal title
GEODERMA
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
GEODERMA
Record number
1297783
Link To Document