Free Standard AU & NZ Shipping For All Book Orders Over $80!
Register      Login
Soil Research Soil Research Society
Soil, land care and environmental research
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Nitrate ammonification and its relationship to the accumulation of ammonium in a Vertisol subsoil

K. L. Page, R. C. Dalal and N. W. Menzies

Australian Journal of Soil Research 41(4) 687 - 697
Published: 18 July 2003

Abstract

High concentrations of ammonium (up to 270 kg N/ha) have been observed in a Vertisol soil below 1 m depth near Warra in south-east Queensland. This study examined the possibility that increased water movement into the subsoil after the removal of native vegetation, and a subsequent increase in periods of waterlogging, could have triggered nitrate ammonification and be responsible for the production of ammonium. Two incubation experiments were conducted to test this hypothesis. The first involved the incubation of repacked cores that had been amended with 30 mg N/kg of 5 atom% 15N nitrate under low oxygen conditions for a period of 360 days. Over this time period the 15N enrichment of the exchangeable ammonium fraction was monitored in order to detect any reduction of nitrate to ammonium. The second experiment involved the incubation of soil amended with 30 mg N/kg of 5 atom% 15N nitrate under waterlogged and low oxygen conditions for 75 days. During this period the redox potential of the soil was monitored using a field test to determine if reducing conditions would develop in this soil over a period of waterlogging, combined with the monitoring of any nitrate reduction to ammonium. The results of these experiments indicated that a small amount of nitrate ammonification (<0.1 mg N/kg) could be observed in the Warra subsoil, but that unless the rate of reduction were to significantly increase with time, this could not account for the accumulation of ammonium observed in the field. The environmental conditions that would make either dissimilatory or abiotic nitrate ammonification favourable were not observed to develop. Consequently, it has been concluded that the observed nitrate ammonification occurred via an assimilatory pathway. Due to the low rate of microbial activity in this subsoil it is considered unlikely that this process was responsible for the subsoil ammonium accumulation at Warra.

https://doi.org/10.1071/SR02100

© CSIRO 2003

Committee on Publication Ethics


Export Citation Get Permission

View Dimensions