학술논문

Effect of potassium on fixation of ammonium by clay minerals in different soil layers.
Document Type
Article
Source
Albanian Journal of Agricultural Sciences. 2013, Vol. 12 Issue 4, p751-757. 7p.
Subject
*POTASSIUM
*CLAY minerals
*AMMONIUM in soils
*AGRICULTURE
*PLANT nutrients
*AGRICULTURAL productivity
*SOIL structure
Language
ISSN
2218-2020
Abstract
In intensive agriculture systems, efficient nutrient use is necessary for high crop yields as well as for sustainable environment management. Fixation of NH4+ and K+ by soil clays affect N and K availability to plants. Latest studies indicates that non-exchangeable NH4+, may affect crop productivity and soil N dynamics more than previously thought. An incubation study with K2SO4 and NH4NO3 was conducted to evaluate NH4+ and K+ fixation in two southern Albanian soils. Soils contained significant amount of native-fixed NH4+ and showed relatively high NH4+ fixing capacity. Native fixed ammonium content varied for horizons Ap and BCg, from 97 to 133 mg/kg and accounted for between 5 to 19, 8 % of the total nitrogen, respectively . Ammonium fixation was increased with N rates and was reduced with increased K rates. When K was added to the soil prior to the NH4, the amount of ammonium fixed was reduced. By contrast, when K+ and NH4+ were added to the soils simultaneously (equivalent amount; 2mEq/100g), the ammonium fixation was increased somewhat in the BCg horizon, whereas no such preference for ammonium fixation was found in the Ap horizon. In case when NH4+ and K+ were added to the soil samples in form of solutions, containing equal amounts of NH4+ (corresponding to 2 mEq NH4+/100 g soil) but varying amounts of K+, the capacity of the soil to fix ammonium was reduced in proportion to the amount of K+ added. The soil samples incubated anaerobically, were with high differences in clay minerals content. The dominate clay minerals for profile (I-Ap horizon) are smectite > vermiculite > Ilite, while vermiculite plus ilite (as the most important clay fixed minerals), comprised 21% of clay fraction and 13 % of the soil. In the profile (II-BCg horizon), the dominant clay minerals ranged; vermiculite > Ilite > smectite, while (vermiculite + ilite), comprised 52% of the clay fraction and 23, 4 % of the soil. Studies on Ap and BCg horizons comparing the amount of NH4+ fixed for equivalent of amount of added cation showed that the NH4+ in BCg horizon was fixed in greater quantities than in Ap horizon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]