Organic matter amendments to soil can reduce nitrate leaching losses from livestock urine under simulated fodder beet grazing

2019 
Abstract This research tested the hypothesis that incorporation of Carbon-Rich Organic Matter Amendments (CROMA) into bare soil after winter forage grazing would immobilise urinary-nitrogen (N) and reduce nitrate-N (NO 3 − -N) leaching losses. In mid-winter (14 July 2016), 32 intact soil monolith lysimeters (500 mm diameter and 700 mm deep) received natural cow urine at the equivalent rate of 300 kg N ha −1 , and CROMA treatments of either: (i) no CROMA (control), (ii) three rates of barley straw [2, 4 or 8 t carbon (C) ha -1 ; C/N ratio of 66:1], (iii) two rates of separated dairy effluent solids (2 or 4 t C ha -1 ; C/N ratio of 31:1), or (iv) two rates of spent woodchip bedding material (2 or 4 t C ha -1 ; C/N ratio of 29:1). Leaching was measured for periods of approximately 100 days after treatment (250 mm of leachate collected). Across all treatments, 98–99% of the N leached was in the form of NO 3 − -N. Incorporated barley straw and effluent solids were effective in reducing NO 3 − -N leaching losses by up to 25% compared to the control treatment. Spent woodchip bedding was shown to be ineffective, which was attributed to a high lignin content.
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