Nitrate leaching under phalaris, cocksfoot, and annual ryegrass pastures and implications for soil acidification

被引:22
作者
Ridley, AM
Simpson, RJ
White, RE
机构
[1] Agr Victoria, Dept Nat Resource & Environm, Rutherglen, Vic 3685, Australia
[2] CSIRO, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia
[3] Univ Melbourne, Inst Land & Food Resources, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia
来源
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH | 1999年 / 50卷 / 01期
关键词
perennials; south-eastern Australia; drainage; grasses;
D O I
10.1071/A98038
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
Nitrogen uptake and nitrate (NO3-) leaching below 1.1 m was estimated under phalaris, cocksfoot, and annual ryegrass pastures and under bare fallow in a 4-year field experiment under control and high N (500 kg N/ha) treatments in north-eastern Victoria (693 mm/year rainfall for the study period). The perennial grasses, particularly phalaris, took up more N in herbage than annual ryegrass. High concentrations of NO3-N were measured at 1 m depth below all treatments, suggesting that NO3- losses from pastures have potential to contaminate streams and/or groundwater. Perennial pastures were only able to reduce NO3- leaching compared with annuals in drier than average years. Values calculated for acid addition due to NO3- leaching resulted in a net annual input of approximately 1 kmol H+/ha.year under the phalaris pasture compared with 2 kmol H+/ha.year under annual ryegrass. Adding these figures to carbon cycle addition data of 1 kmol H+/ha.year (measured in a previous study) corresponds to a lime rate of 100 and 150 kg lime/ha.year being required to stop further acidification under these pasture types. A 1 unit pH decline to 30 cm depth was estimated to take 42 years under annual pasture or 67 years under perennial grasses. Whilst perennial pastures have a role in reducing soil acidification, lime application is the most important management option in balancing soil acidification caused by agriculture.
引用
收藏
页码:55 / 63
页数:9
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