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

The influence of potassium and defoliation of ryegrass on the formation of acidic subsurface layers in stock urine patches

J. R. Condon A C , A. S. Black A and M. K. Conyers B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A School of Agriculture and Farrer Centre, Charles Sturt University, Locked Bag 588, Wagga Wagga, NSW 2678, Australia.

B Wagga Wagga Agricultural Institute, New South Wales Agriculture, PMB, Wagga Wagga, NSW 2650, Australia.

C Corresponding author. Email: jcondon@csu.edu.au

Australian Journal of Soil Research 43(2) 213-223 https://doi.org/10.1071/SR04077
Submitted: 16 June 2004  Accepted: 29 November 2004   Published: 1 April 2005

Abstract

This study examined the influence of simulated urine solutions containing various KCl and urea-N rates on the formation of acidic subsurface layers in soil columns. A factorial design was implemented with application rates equivalent to 0, 21, 42, 63, and 84 g urea-N/m2 and 0, 12.5, 25, and 37.5 g KCl-K/m2. The addition of N caused the formation of acidic subsurface layers at depths between 0.02 and 0.10 m. The magnitude of the resultant net acidification and the depth of the most acidic layer increased with N rate. More acidification occurred at depth at the higher N rates due to the downward movement of NH4+-N. The inclusion of K in the simulated urine produced less acidity in the surface layers and more acidity at depth as the K application rate increased owing to competition between K+ and NH4+-N for exchange sites, allowing more NH4+-N to move to depth. The residual acidity in the soil at the completion of the experiment was found to be greater than the alkalinity of plant material. Therefore, acidic subsurface layers are likely to persist after plant death and decomposition.

We also examined the impact of defoliation on the resultant pH profiles formed following simulated urine addition. Defoliation accentuated the magnitude of acidic subsurface layers, possibly due to changes in the rate of N uptake. The influence of defoliation was minor compared with the main effects of N addition.

Additional keywords: acidification, soil pH, urea, nitrification, uptake, ash alkalinity.


Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank the Farrer Centre of Charles Sturt University for funding the experimental work.


References


Bago B, Azcón-Aguilar C (1997) Changes in the rhizospheric pH induced by arbruscular mycorrhiza formation in onion (Allium cepa L.). Zeitschrift Fur Pflanzenernahrung Und Bodenkunde 160, 333–339. open url image1

Ball R, Keeney DR, Theobald PW, Nes P (1979) Nitrogen balance in urine-affected areas of a New Zealand pasture. Agronomy Journal 71, 309–314. open url image1

Barlow EWR (1972) Nitrogen transformations and volatilisation in sheep urine patches. Master of Rural Science thesis, University of New England, Armidale, NSW.

Barlow EWR (1974) Nitrogen transformation and volatilization in sheep urine patches. Journal of the Australian Institute of Agricultural Science 40, 51–52. open url image1

Black AS (1992) Soil acidification in urine- and urea-affected soil. Australian Journal of Soil Research 30, 989–999. open url image1

Bolan NS, Adriano DC, Curtin D (2003) Soil acidification and liming interactions with nutrient and heavy metal transformation and bioavailability. Advances in Agronomy 78, 216–273. open url image1

Bolan NS, Hedley MJ, White RE (1991) Processes of soil acidification during nitrogen cycling with emphasis on legume based pastures. Plant and Soil 134, 53–63.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Bremner JM, Keeney DR (1966) Determination and isotope-ratio analysis of different forms of nitrogen in soils: 3. Exchangeable ammonium, nitrate, and nitrite by extraction-distillation methods. Soil Science Society of America Proceedings 30, 577–582. open url image1

Bronson KF, Sparling GP, Fillery IRP (1999) Short-term N dynamics following application of 15N-labelled urine to a sandy soil in summer. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 31, 1049–1057.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Carran RA (1988) Influence of soil nitrogen transformations on cation uptake by urine-affected pastures. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research 31, 65–69. open url image1

Clement CR, Hopper MJ, Jones LHP, Leafe EL (1978) The uptake of nitrate by Lolium perenne from flowing nutrient solution. II. Effect of light, defoliation, and relationship to CO2 flux. Journal of Experimental Botany 29, 1173–1183. open url image1

Condon JR, Black AS, Conyers MK (2004) The role of N transformations in the formation of acidic subsurface layers in stock urine patches. Australian Journal of Soil Research 42, 221–230.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Conyers MK, Uren NC, Helyar KR (1995) Causes of change in pH in acidic mineral soils. Soil Biology & Biochemistry 27, 1383–1392.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Crooke WM, Simpson WE (1971) Determination of ammonium in Kjeldahl digest of crops by automated procedure. Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture 22, 379–390. open url image1

Doak BW (1952) Some chemical changes in the nitrogenous constituents of urine when voided on pasture. Journal of Agricultural Science 42, 162–171. open url image1

Dolling PJ, Porter WM, Robson AD (1991) Effect of soil acidity on barley production in the south-west of Western Australia. 1. The interaction between lime and nutrient application. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 31, 803–810.
Crossref |
open url image1

Epstein, E (1972). ‘Mineral nutrition of plants: principles and perspectives.’ (Wiley: New York)

Evans CM, Conyers MK, Black AS, Poile GJ (1998) Effect of ammonium, organic amendments, and plant growth on soil pH stratification. Australian Journal of Soil Research 36, 641–653.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Fergus IF, Stirk GB (1961) The control of soil physical conditions in pot trials. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture and Animal Husbandry 1, 119–125.
Crossref |
open url image1

Gijsman AJ (1990) Rhizosphere pH along different root zones of Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), as affected by source of nitrogen. Plant and Soil 124, 161–167. open url image1

Gillman GP, Sumpter EA (1986) Modification to the compulsive exchange method for measuring exchange characteristics of soils. Australian Journal of Soil Research 24, 61–66. open url image1

Haynes RJ, Goh KM (1978) Ammonium and nitrate nutrition of plants. Biological Reviews 53, 465–510.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Haynes RJ, Williams PH (1992) Changes in soil solution composition and pH in urine-affected areas of pasture. Journal of Soil Science 43, 323–334. open url image1

Helyar KR (1976) Nitrogen cycling and soil acidification. Journal of the Australian Institute of Agricultural Science 42, 217–221. open url image1

Helyar KR, Cregan PD, Godyn DL (1990) Soil acidity in New South Wales—current pH values and estimates of acidification rates. Australian Journal of Soil Research 28, 523–537. open url image1

Helyar KR, Porter WM (1989) Soil acidification, its measurement and the processes involved. ‘Soil acidity and plant growth’. (Ed. AD Robson) pp. 61–102. (Academic Press: Sydney)

Holland PT, During C (1977) Movement of nitrate-N and transformations of urea-N under field conditions. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research 20, 479–488. open url image1

Isbell, RF (1996). ‘The Australian Soil Classification.’ (CSIRO Publishing: Melbourne, Vic.)

Jarvis SC, Robson AD (1983) The effects of nitrogen nutrition of plants on the development of acidity in Western Australian soils. II. Effects of differences in cation/anion balance between plant species grown under non-leaching conditions. Australian Journal of Soil Research 34, 355–365. open url image1

Kennedy, IR (1992). ‘Acid soil and acid rain.’ (John Wiley and Sons Inc.: Brisbane, Qld)

Marschner H, Römheld V, Horst WJ, Martin P (1986) Root-induced changes in the rhizosphere: Importance for the mineral nutrition of plants. Zeitschrift Fur Pflanzenernahrung Und Bodenkunde 149, 441–456. open url image1

Marschner H, Römheld V, Ossenberg-Neuhaus H (1982) Rapid method for measuring changes in pH and reducing processes along roots of intact plants. Zeitschrift Fur Pflanzenphysiologie Bd. 105, 407–416. open url image1

Moody PW, Aitken RL, Dickson T (1998) Field amelioration of acidic soils in south-east Queensland. III. Relationships of maize yield response to lime and unamended soil properties. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 49, 649–656.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Monaghan RM, Cameron KC, McLay CDA (1989) Leaching losses of nitrogen from sheep urine patches. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research 32, 237–244. open url image1

Osborne GJ (1976) The significance of intercalary ammonium in representative surface and subsoils from New South Wales. Australian Journal of Soil Research 14, 381–388. open url image1

Paul KI, Black AS, Conyers MK (2001) Effect of plant residue return on the development of surface soil pH gradients. Biology and Fertility of Soils 33, 75–82.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Phillips IR, Black AS, Cameron KC (1988) Effect of cation exchange on the distribution and movement of cations in soils with variable charge. II. Effect of lime or phosphate on potassium and magnesium leaching. Fertilizer Research 17, 31–46.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Singh R, Nye PH (1986) A model of ammonia volatilization from applied urea. II. Experimental testing. Journal of Soil Science 37, 21–29. open url image1

Ridley AM, Slattery WJ, Helyar KR, Cowling A (1990) The importance of the carbon cycle to acidification of a grazed annual pasture. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 30, 529–537.
Crossref |
open url image1

Saunders WMH, Metson AJ (1959) Fate of potassium applied to pasture on a soil derived from andesitic ash. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research 2, 1211–1231. open url image1

Smith FW (1978) The effect of potassium and nitrogen on ionic relations and organic acid accumulation in Panicum maximum Var. Trichomglume. Plant and Soil 49, 367–379. open url image1

Smith FW (1986) Pasture species. ‘Plant analysis: An interpretation manual’. (Eds DJ Reuter, JB Robinson) (Inkata Press: Melbourne, Vic.)

Tang C (1998) Factors affecting soil acidification under legumes I. Effect of potassium supply. Plant and Soil 199, 275–282.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Thomas RJ, Logan KAB, Ironside AD, Bolton GR (1988) Transformations and fate of sheep urine-N applied to an upland U.K. pasture at different times during the growing season. Plant and Soil 107, 173–181. open url image1

Williams BL, Dawson LA, Grayston SJ, Shand CA (2003) Impact of defoliation on the distribution of 15N-labelled synthetic sheep urine between shoots and roots of Agrostis capillaris and soil N pools. Plant and Soil 251, 269–278.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Williams PH, Gregg PEH, Hedley MJ (1990) Fate of potassium in dairy cow urine applied to intact soil cores. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research 33, 151–158. open url image1

Williams PH, Haynes RJ (1994) Comparison of initial wetting pattern, nutrient concentrations in soil solution and the fate of 15N-labelled urine in sheep and cattle urine patch areas of a pasture soil. Plant and Soil 162, 49–59. open url image1

Williams PH, Hedley MJ, Gregg PEH (1989) Uptake of potassium and nitrogen by pasture from urine-affected soil. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research 32, 415–421. open url image1

Young SR, Black AS, Conyers MK (2002) Distribution of nitrification within surface soils under pasture. Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis 33, 1507–1518.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1