• Title of article

    Methodological limitations and N-budget differences among a restored tallgrass prairie and maize agroecosystems

  • Author/Authors

    Brye، K. R. نويسنده , , Norman، J. M. نويسنده , , Gower، S. T. نويسنده , , Bundy، L. G. نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    -180
  • From page
    181
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    Interpretation of elemental balances requires careful assessment of component terms and their errors, especially for the major terms of the nitrogen (N) budget which has implications for environmental health. This study reports results from independent field measurements of major annual N-budget components, including atmospheric deposition, fertilizer added, net mineralization, residue returned, soil storage changes of inorganic N, leaching, and plant uptake. Measurements were made in a restored tallgrass prairie and optimally and deficiently N-fertilized, no-tillage and chisel-plowed maize (Zea mays L.) agroecosystems on Plano silt loam soil (fine-silty, mixed, superactive, mesic Typic Argiudoll (USDA); Haplic Phaeozem (approximate FAO)) in Wisconsin between 1995 and 1999. Denitrification and N losses due to runoff were assumed negligible and bulk density was assumed uniform with depth and across ecosystems. Annual inorganic N leaching was negligible in the restored prairie, but represented 3-57% of the amount of fertilizer-N applied in the optimally N-fertilized agroecosystems. On an annual basis, closure of the inorganic-N budget yielded cumulative errors that were often undesirably large; indicating methodological problems with quantifying ecosystem N cycling in situ. Increased spatial sampling is required to reduce individual measurement errors of two components with large uncertainties; namely net Nmineralization and soil inorganic N changes. Profile-scaled net N-mineralization generally did not balance with the residue N input from the previous year, but the imbalance agreed with the N-budget imbalance. Both results suggest that the prairie is accumulating N slowly, the deficiently Nfertilized maize plots are losing N more rapidly, and the optimally N-fertilized maize plots have too large an uncertainty to be interpreted confidently. Nitrogen-use efficiency, defined on a N-uptake basis, did not differ among the prairie and deficiently N-fertilized maize for 3 out of 5 years, but the prairie was significantly more efficient than the optimally N-fertilized maize.
  • Keywords
    tallgrass prairie , Nitrogen budget , Wisconsin , Agroecosystems , maize
  • Journal title
    Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment
  • Record number

    39090