Journal article

Reduced nitrate leaching from an Irish cropland soil under non-inversion tillage with cover cropping greatly outweighs increased dissolved organic nitrogen leaching


Authors listWalmsley, DC; Siemens, J; Kindler, R; Kaiser, K; Saunders, M; Fichtner, A; Kaupenjohann, M; Osborne, BA

Publication year2018

Pages340-349

JournalAgriculture, Ecosystems and Environment

Volume number265

ISSN0167-8809

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2018.06.031

PublisherElsevier


Abstract
Reduced tillage and cover cropping are common measures to minimize leaching losses of nutrients from crop-land soils. While the efficiency of these measures for reducing inorganic N leaching has been studied intensively, their effect on dissolved, organically-bound nitrogen (DON) remains unclear. In this study, leaching of nitrate, ammonium and DON from spring barley-based cropping systems, subject to either conventional management (CT = inversion tillage with a winter fallow period), or non-inversion tillage with a winter mustard cover crop (NIT + CC), were assessed using suction cup sampling and modelled drainage volumes. Total dissolved nitrogen losses with drainage from the NIT + CC treatment (2.5 +/- 0.2 g N m(-2) yr(-1)) were considerably smaller than those from the conventional treatment with fallow (13.9 +/- 0.7g N m(-2) yr(-1)). As drainage volumes were similar between treatments, differences in total N leaching were mainly associated with larger nitrate concentrations under CT (23.0 +/- 1.1 mg N L-1) than under the NIT + CC treatment (5.1 +/- 0.3 mg N L-1). The average contribution of DON to total dissolved nitrogen concentration was 3% within the CT treatment, but rose to 19% within the NIT + CC treatment, which was primarily due to the strong reduction in nitrate and to a lesser extent due to the higher concentrations of DON within the NIT + CC treatment (NIT + CC: 0.52 +/- 0.04, CT: 0.33 +/- 0.04 mg N L-1). Averaged over the two-year study period, the CT system showed a net loss of 9.4 g N m(-2) yr(-)1 whilst an N surplus of 1.7 gN m(-2) yr(-1) was observed for the NIT + CC system. Here DON accounted for 11% of total N leaching, supporting the notion that it can be an important component of dissolved N losses in agroecosystems. By neglecting DON leaching the N-surplus under NIT + CC would have been overestimated by 18%. In conclusion, our results show that the capacity of winter cover cropping in combination with non inversion tillage to reduce nitrate leaching far outweighed the higher leaching losses of DON observed. The quantification of DON losses, however, may be essential for a complete picture of the N balance of these and similar cropping systems.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleWalmsley, D., Siemens, J., Kindler, R., Kaiser, K., Saunders, M., Fichtner, A., et al. (2018) Reduced nitrate leaching from an Irish cropland soil under non-inversion tillage with cover cropping greatly outweighs increased dissolved organic nitrogen leaching, Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, 265, pp. 340-349. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2018.06.031

APA Citation styleWalmsley, D., Siemens, J., Kindler, R., Kaiser, K., Saunders, M., Fichtner, A., Kaupenjohann, M., & Osborne, B. (2018). Reduced nitrate leaching from an Irish cropland soil under non-inversion tillage with cover cropping greatly outweighs increased dissolved organic nitrogen leaching. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment. 265, 340-349. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2018.06.031


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