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Plant sciences, sustainable farming systems and food quality
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The nitrogen economy of broadacre lupin in southwest Australia

MJ Unkovich, JS Pate and J Hamblin

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 45(1) 149 - 164
Published: 1994

Abstract

The time courses of above- and below-ground accumulation of biomass and N were followed in a crop of narrowleaf lupin (Lupinus angustifolius L. cv. Illyarrie) at Geraldton, W.A., and concurrent N2 fixation assessed using the 15N natural abundance technique. Crop biomass peaked at 10 t DM and 231 kg N ha-1 with 13% of this N below ground. The crop accumulated the bulk (90%) of its N through symbiotic N2 fixation. Of the 164 kg total plant N ha-1 remaining in recoverable biomass at maturity 44% was recovered as grain, 49% as other above-ground residues and 7% as roots. Despite a decrease in recoverable N of 67 kg ha-1 between peak biomass and maturity, 96 kg N ha-1 was returned as crop residues after grain harvest. Investigation of six farm crops in the study region gave values for nitrogen accumulation at peak biomass ranging from 199 to 372 kg ha-1 of which, on average, 86% (222 kg ha-1) was fixed from the atmosphere. Predicted N returns to the soil from fixation averaged 65 kg ha-1, though the range (32-96 kg ha-1) indicated that south-west Australian lupin crops provide somewhat variably sized pools of mineralizeable crop residues for following cereal growth.

Keywords: Lupinus angustifolius, N benefit, N2 fixation, 15N natural abundance.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9940149

© CSIRO 1994

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