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Soil mineralizable nitrogen as an indicator of soil nitrogen supply for grain corn in southwestern Ontario A Thesis submitted to the Committee of Graduate Studies in Partial Fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in the Faculty of Arts and Science TRENT UNIVERSITY Peterborough, Ontario, Canada © Copyright by Jessica Lucie Stoeckli 2015 Environmental and Life Science M.Sc. Graduate Program September 2015

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Page 1: Soil mineralizable nitrogen as an indicator of soil ... · Soil mineralizable nitrogen as an indicator of soil nitrogen supply for grain corn in southwestern Ontario A Thesis submitted

Soil mineralizable nitrogen as an indicator of soil nitrogen supply for grain corn in southwestern Ontario

A Thesis submitted to the Committee of Graduate Studies in Partial Fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in the Faculty of Arts and Science

TRENT UNIVERSITY

Peterborough, Ontario, Canada

© Copyright by Jessica Lucie Stoeckli 2015

Environmental and Life Science M.Sc. Graduate Program

September 2015

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ABSTRACT

Soil mineralizable nitrogen as an indicator of soil nitrogen supply for grain corn in southwestern Ontario

Jessica Lucie Stoeckli

Soil mineralizable nitrogen (N) is the main component of soil N supply in humid

temperate regions and should be considered in N fertilizer recommendations. The

objectives of this study were to determine the potentially mineralizable N parameters, and

improve N fertilizer recommendations by evaluating a suite of soil N tests in southwestern

Ontario. The study was conducted over the 2013 and 2014 growing seasons using 19 field

sites across southwestern Ontario. The average potentially mineralizable N (N0) and

readily mineralizable N (Pool I) were 147 mg kg-1 and 42 mg kg-1, respectively. Pool I

was the only soil N test that successfully predicted RY in 2013. The PPNT and water

soluble N (WSN) concentration (0-30cm depth) at planting were the best predictors of

fertilizer N requirement when combing data from 2013 and 2014. When soils were

categorized based on soil texture, the relationships also improved. Our findings suggest

that N fertilizer recommendations for grain corn can be improved, however, further field

validations are required.

Keywords: nitrogen, nitrogen mineralization, corn, southwestern Ontario, soil nitrogen supply, soil N test

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First, I would like to thank my supervisor, Dr. Mehdi Sharifi for providing me with this

opportunity. I would also like to thank my committee members Dr. Catherine Eimers and

Dr. Raul Ponce Hernandez for their guidance and participation. I would like to thank my

collaborators Greg Stewart, Craig Drury, Dave Hooker, Bao-Luo Ma and their

technicians Kenneth Van Raay, Scott Jay, Henk Wichers, Ben Rosser, Scott Patterson

and Lynne Evenson for their collaboration, patience and support throughout the course of

this project, they were a valuable asset to the completion of this project. I am grateful for

my lab partner and friend Samantha Halloran for all the help and support she has

provided me over the past two years and Liana Orlovskaya for technical assistance.

Finally I would like to thank Ben Thomas for the endless intellectual conversations and

support, and my family for their encouragement.

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TITLE PAGE /i ABSTRACT /ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS /iii TABLE OF CONTENTS /iv LIST OF FIGURES /vi LIST OF TABLES /vii LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS /ix CHAPTER 1. Review of methods for estimating soil N supply for grain corn in Ontario

1.1 Introduction /1 1.2 Nitrogen in crop production /2

1.2.1 Forms of N in soil /2 1.2.1.1 Soil mineral N /2 1.2.1.2 Soil organic N (SON) /3 1.2.2 Nitrogen transformation /6 1.2.2.1 N mineralization and immobilization /6 1.2.2.2 N losses /9 1.2.3 Soil N supply /11 1.3 Current status of N recommendations for corn in Ontario /12 1.3.1 Pre-plant nitrate test (PPNT) /13 1.3.2 Pre-sidedress nitrate test (PSNT) /14 1.4 Methods of predicting soil N supply /15 1.4.1 Laboratory- based measures of soil N supply /15 1.4.1.1 Biological tests /15 1.4.1.2 Chemical tests /17 1.4.2 Field-based measures of soil N supply / 25 1.4.2.1 Crop response /25 1.6 Conclusion /26 1.7 Thesis Objectives /27 CHAPTER 2. Evaluating laboratory-based indicators to predict N availability to corn in southwestern Ontario 2.0 Abstract /28 2.1 Introduction /29 2.2 Materials and Methods /31 2.2.1 Site description and plot setup /31 2.2.2 Soil sampling and analysis /35 2.2.3 Laboratory methods of predicting crop N availability /35 2.2.4 Field-based indicators of crop N availability /39 2.2.5 Statistical analysis /40 2.3 Results / 40 2.3.1 Laboratory methods of predicting corn N availability /40 2.3.2 Field-based indicators of corn N availability /47 2.3.3 Relationships between laboratory and field-based indicators /49 2.4 Discussion /55 2.4.1 Laboratory methods of predicting corn N availability /55

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2.4.2 Field-based indicators of corn N availability /58 2.4.3 Relationships between laboratory and field-based indicators of crop N availability /59 2.5 Conclusion /61 CHAPTER 3. Assessing the ability of laboratory-based indicators of mineralizable N to predict fertilizer N recommendations for corn in southwestern Ontario 3.0 Abstract /63 3.1 Introduction /64 3.2 Materials and methods /68 3.2.1 Field site description and plot setup /68 3.2.2 Soil sampling and analysis /71 3.2.3 Soil N test parameters /71 3.2.4 Field indicators of corn N availability /73 3.2.5 Statistical Analysis /77 3.3 Results /78 3.3.1 Soil N test parameters /78 3.3.2 Field indicators of corn N availability /80 3.3.3 Soil test correlation and calibration /85 3.4 Discussion /99 3.4.1 Soil N test parameters /99 3.4.2 Field indicators of corn N availability /100 3.4.3 Soil N test correlation and calibration /102 3.5 Conclusion /104 GENERAL CONCLUSIONS/106 REFERENCES /108 APPENDIX /125

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LIST OF FIGURES Figure 2.1 Map of locations of experimental field sites in southwestern Ontario in 2013. n=12. Figure 2.2 The relationship between PNU0N and DY in zero N plots for experimental corn sites in Ontario. Figure 2.3. Relationship between PPNT and RY for experimental sites in Ontario in 2013. Figure 2.4 Relationship between Pool I and RY for (a) the whole data set, (b) Cs-T soils (clay ≤ 240 g kg-1), and (c) Md-T soils (clay > 240 g kg-1); *=data point not included in correlation and regression analysis. Figure 2.5. Relationship between Pool I + SMNp in CT soils and RY. *=data point not included in correlation and regression analysis. Figure 3.1 Map of locations of experimental field sites in southwestern Ontario in 2014, n=7. Figure 3.2. A scheme of corn N calculator spreadsheet developed by OMAFRA for general recommendation of N rates for corn in Ontario. Figure 3.3 Corn grain yield response curves to N applied at all individual experimental corn trials that obtained maximum yield, each point is the mean of replicates (n=4). Figure 3.4 Relationship between soil N supply and relative yield (RY) for corn N trials in Ontario in 2013 and 2014. (n=49). Figure 3.5. Relationship between relative yield and a PPNT, b WEMN and c WSN for the whole data set (n=49). Figure 3.6. Relationship between RY and a Pool I + SMNp and b WEMN in Cs-T soils (n=28). Figure 3.7. Relationship between RY and a WEMN, b WEOC:N and c POMC:N for Md-T soils (n=21). Figure 3.8 Relationship between a PPNT and MERN b PPNT and MYRN c WSN and MERN and d WSN and MYRN; x=Elora site.

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LIST OF TABLES Table 2.1. Summary of characteristics for 12 experimental sites established in southwestern Ontario (n=4). Table 2.2. Mean values for N mineralization parameters (standard deviation in parenthesis) measured during the long-term aerobic incubation for soils from each experimental site sampled in southwestern Ontario (n=4). Table 2.3 Mean cumulative N mineralized on day 2, 4 7 and 14 of the long-term aerobic incubation for each experimental field site (n=4) and the correlation coefficient (r) with RY at each time step for Cs-T (n=21) and Md-T (n=21) soil texture group. Table 2.4. Mean values for mineralizable N tests (standard deviation in parenthesis) measured in soils from 12 experimental sites (n=4). Table 2.5. Mean values for field-based indicators of crop N availability (standard deviation in parenthesis) measured at 12 experimental sites in southwestern Ontario (n=4). Table 2.6. Correlation coefficients (r) between laboratory indicators for predicting crop N availability and RY for whole data set (n=42), Cs-T soils (clay ≤ 240 g kg-1, n=21) and Md-T soils (clay>240 g kg-1, n=21). Table 3.1 Summary of site characteristics for 2014 corn N response trials in Ontario (n=4). Table 3.2 Means for the proposed soil N tests (standard deviation in parenthesis) from 7 corn N response trials in Ontario in 2014 (n=4). Table 3.3 Mean values for crop yield, crop response indicators and soil N supply (standard deviation in parenthesis) from 13 corn N response trials across Ontario (n=4) established in 2013 and 2014. Table 3.4. Recommended rate of N fertilizer (MERN and MYRN) for each site in 2013 and 2014 using the quadratic equation based on corn yield response to fertilizer N rates (Figure 3.3), and recommended rate based on the corn N Calculator. Table 3.5. Correlation coefficients (r) between soil N tests and RY for 2013 and 2014 Category I field sites field sites for the whole dataset (DS), coarse textured soils (Cs-T soils, clay ≤ 240 g kg-1) and medium textured soils (Md-T soils, clay > 240 g kg-1). Table 3.6. Correlation coefficients (r) between soil N test parameters and MERN and MYRN for 2013 and 2014 field sites for the whole dataset (DS), coarse textured soils (Cs-T soils, clay ≤ 240 g kg-1) and medium textured soils (Md-T soils, clay > 240 g kg-1).

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Table 3.7 Interpretation table for successful soil N tests PPNT and WSN using linear response curves derived from the relationship between RY and soil N test. For PPNT, RY= 3.24(PPNT)+34. For WSN, RY=1.37(WSN)+3.4. Table 3.8 Recommended N fertilizer rates based on the linear relationship between PPNT concentration and MERN (MERN=-5.16 (PPNT)+203; R2 =0.47) and MYRN (MYRN=-4.72(PPNT)+167; R2=0.56). Table 3.9. Recommended N fertilizer rate based on the linear relationship between WSN concentrations and MERN (MERN=-2.02(WSN)+250; R2=0.60) and MYRN (MYRN=-1.65(WSN)+197; R2=0.48).

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LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS 2M KCl extractable nitrogen following hot water extraction (KCl-WEOM)

95% of the maximum yield (95% RY)

Adenosine triphosphate (ATP)

Ammonia (NH3)

Ammonium (NH4)

Carbon (C)

Cation exchange capacity (CEC)

Crop heat unit (CHU)

Delta yield (∆Y)

Dissolved organic matter (DOM)

Economic optimum nitrogen (EONR)

Electrical conductivity (EC)

Extractable organic matter (EOM)

Hot water extractable organic matter (Hot-WEOM)

Hot water extractable organic carbon (Hot-WEOC)

Illinois soil nitrogen test (ISNT)

Light fraction organic matter carbon (LFOMC)

Light fraction organic matter nitrogen (LFOMN)

Maximum economic rate of nitrogen (MERN)

Mineralization rate constant (k)

Microbial biomass (MB)

Microbial biomass carbon (MCB)

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Microbial biomass nitrogen (MBN)

Nitrate (NO3)

Nitrogen (N)

Nitrogen use efficiency (NUE)

Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs (OMAFRA)

Organic matter (OM)

Particulate organic matter (POM)

Particulate organic matter carbon (POMC)

Particulate organic matter nitrogen (POMN)

Potassium Chloride (KCl)

Potentially mineralizable nitrogen (N0)

Net nitrogen mineralized (Net N min)

Nitrogen mineralized during the first 2 weeks of the aerobic incubation (Pool I)

Nitrogen mineralized during weeks 2 and 24 of the aerobic incubation Pool II

Nitrogen predicted to mineralize during the aerobic incubation minus Pool II (Pool III)

Pre-plant nitrate test (PPNT)

Pre-sidedress nitrate test (PSNT)

Relative yield (RY)

Residual soil nitrate (RSN)

Salt extractable organic matter (SEOM)

Sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3)

Soil mineral nitrogen at harvest (SMNh)

Soil mineral nitrogen at planting (SMNp)

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Soil organic matter (SOM)

Soil organic nitrogen (SON)

Total carbon (TC)

Total nitrogen (TN)

Ultraviolet (UV)

Ultraviolet absorbance of a sodium bicarbonate extract at 205 (NaHCO3-205)

Ultraviolet absorbance of a sodium bicarbonate extract at 260 (NaHCO3-260)

Water extractable mineral nitrogen (WEMN)

Water extractable organic matter (WEOM)

Water extractable organic nitrogen (WEON)

Water extractable organic carbon (WEOC)

Water filled pore space (WFPS)

Water soluble nitrogen (WSN)

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Chapter 1. Review of methods for estimating soil N supply for grain corn in Ontario 1.1 Introduction

Soil mineralizable nitrogen (N) is an important but variable component of the soil N

supply to grain corn (Zea Mays) in southwestern Ontario as residual mineral N and

fertilizer N is highly susceptible to leaching. The soil N supply is the amount of soil N that

will be available to the field crop during a growing season and consists of residual mineral

N from the previous growing season and N mineralized from soil organic N (SON) during

the current growing season (HGCA, 2012; Whalen et al., 2013). In humid temperate

environments the soil N supply is dominated by SON mineralization due to the high

mineral N losses during the off-season months (Zebarth et al., 1996; Wu et al., 2008). A

large portion of the total N in the soil is in the organic form but only 1-4% will mineralize

into plant available nitrate and ammonium (NO3 and NH4) during a growing season

(Tisdale et al., 1985; Warren, 2014). The contribution of SON to the plant available pool

throughout the growing season is difficult to predict due to variations in soil physical and

chemical properties, environmental factors (temperature and precipitation), and

management practices (Ma et al., 2004).

For corn production in Ontario, soil N mineralization is not accounted for when providing

producers with N fertilizer recommendations as rates rely on the pre-plant nitrate (NO3)

test (PPNT) or the pre-sidedress NO3 test (PSNT) (Verhallen and LeBoeuf, 2009). The

PPNT and PSNT estimate NO3 concentrations in the soil at one point in time (St. Luce et

al. 2011; Dayegamiye, et al., 2012), however it is well known that NO3 is highly

susceptible to leaching which results in an economic loss for growers and has

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environmental implications. One approach to minimize N losses is through consideration

of the SON mineralized throughout the growing season prior to mineral N fertilizer

application. Limited information is available for a pre-plant soil N mineralization test and

the effectiveness of such a test for grain corn in southwestern Ontario. Nitrogen fertilizer

recommendations could be improved by developing indicators of the contribution of soil

N mineralization to crop N demand, which could have economic benefits and reduce

environmental pollution. This chapter will cover the process of N mineralization and its

importance to crop N uptake, introduce the concept of the soil N supply and summarize

laboratory and field-based indicators for assessing and predicting plant available N for

corn production in southwestern Ontario

1.2. Nitrogen in crop production

1.2.1 Forms of N in Soil

1.2.1.1 Soil mineral N

Nitrogen is an essential nutrient in crop production and deficiencies can result in

substantial yield losses (St.Luce et al., 2011). The major source of soil N for corn is

mineral N (NH4 and NO3). Total N content in mineral soils is approximately 1% of which

5% is in the mineral form (Havlin et al., 2005). Ammonium can originate from the

mineralization (transformation of organic N into mineral N by soil microorganisms) of

SON or be added to the soil as ammonia N fertilizers or organic amendments such as

composted animal manures and slurries (Myrold and Bottomley, 2008). In agricultural

soils of Ontario, NO3 is the most abundant and extractable form of mineral N (Whalen

and Sampedro, 2010) and the majority originates from the nitrification of NH4 by

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chemoautotrophic microorganisms in the soil. Additionally, atmospheric deposition of N

can be a source of mineral N. Ammonia volatilization from land application of manure,

animal grazing and manure storage can be deposited and transformed into NO3 on

agricultural fields or be directly assimilated by crops through their stomata (Bittman and

Mikkelsen, 2009). Zbieranowski and Aherne (2012) found that NH3 concentration in

southern Ontario was highest in the springtime and varied from 0.3 𝜇g m3 (0.0004 ppm)

in low intensity agricultural areas to 2.8 𝜇g m3 (0.00387ppm) in areas of intensive

agriculture. The concentration was directly related to cattle and pig numbers. Watmough

et al. (2014) found that N concentration could also be predicted by road density (R2=0.32

for NH3 and 0.79 for NO2) and Aherne and Posch, (2013) estimated that N deposition can

exceed 20 kg N ha-1 yr-1 in some areas of southern Ontario.

In conventional corn production in Ontario the main sources of mineral N are mineral N

fertilizers and the decomposition and mineralization of crop residues and/or SON. The

Ontario Ministry of Agriculture Food and Rural Affairs (OMAFRA) reported average

spring NO3 concentrations of 9.8 mg N kg-1 soil in 2014, which is lower than the

historical average of 11 mg kg-1 and the 2012 average of 12.2 mg kg-1 (warm spring), and

higher than the 2011 average of 9.5 mg kg-1 (cool spring).

1.2.1.2 Soil organic N (SON)

The SON in soils is approximately 95% of the total N and is held in the soil organic

matter (SOM) (Schulten and Schnitzer, 1998; Olk, 2008). In southwestern Ontario soils

the SOM content ranges between 1 and 6% (OMAFRA, 2009). The N compounds found

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in the SOM are generally complex compounds including free amino acids, peptides and

proteins bound to clay minerals and humic colloids, amino sugars, nucleic acids,

chlorophyll related phospholipids, amines, vitamins, and heterocyclic N compounds

(Stevenson 1982,1994). The concentration of SON is typically a reflection of

management practices- mainly input and tillage (Wanniarachchi et al., 1999). The main

input of organic N in conventional corn production in Ontario is crop residues (Gregorich

et al., 1996).

The three main sources of crop residues include corn, soybean (Glycine max) and wheat

(Triticum spp.) stalks and in some cases, red clover and hay. Residues can be left on the

field, removed for straw or removed for bio-processing (OFA, 2012). A direct interaction

between fertilization rate and crop residue biomass is apparent and by increasing the

amount of residue returned to the soil, the SOM content and soil N supply tend to

increase. Gregorich et al. (1996) found that mineral N fertilization over 30 years in a

continuous corn rotation doubled the crop residue input compared with no fertilization.

The high crop residue input in this system also resulted in a 10% increase in soil carbon

(C). The plant availability of N from crop residues is dependent on their C: N ratio

(Jensen, 1994; Willson et al., 2001; Sanchez et al., 2004). Residues with low C: N ratio

(eg. legumes such as red clover) are expected to decompose rapidly, potentially

increasing soil N supply during the beginning of the growing season (Wilson et al.,

2001). When residues with a high C: N ratio are added (eg. corn and wheat stalks),

immobilization of N occurs at first followed by a period of mineralization as the C: N

ratio of the residue decreases (Green et al., 1995). The contribution of crop residues to

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soil N supply depends on the residue type and percent residue cover, tillage, soil

properties and environmental conditions (Thorup-Kristensen et al., 2003).

Tillage can affect SOM levels and consequently SON dynamics through several

processes (Six et al., 1999; Mikha and Rice, 2004). Incorporation of crop residues

increases the rate and degree of decomposition (Douglas et al., 1980; Christensen, 1986)

by disrupting soil structure and increasing the oxidation of SOM (Paustian et al., 1995).

Contrasting results on SOM conservation under no tillage or minimal tillage have been

observed. Several studies have shown SOM content to increase in the surface soil under

no tillage (Kern and Johnson, 1993; Angers et al., 1997), while others have reported no

significant differences (O’Halloran, 1993). The effect of tillage is more prominent on

active fractions of SON rather than the total SON (Soon et al., 2001; Liang et al., 2004;

Sharifi et al., 2008). Sharifi et al. (2008) found that the active fraction of N (N

mineralized during a controlled aerobic incubation) increased by 21% on average under

no tillage compared to conventional tillage in soils collected from Saskatchewan and

Quebec.

The SON can be fractionated into various pools depending on stability and turnover rates;

a young readily available or labile pool, an intermediate pool which influences the soils

physical status, and a recalcitrant pool that is relatively inert to microbial breakdown and

relates to the physicochemical reactivity of soils (Ros et al., 2011). The labile pool has a

turnover time of days to months and the recalcitrant pool has a turnover time of years

(Biederbeck et al., 1994; Gregorich et al., 2003). The labile pool is of most interest in

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crop production as it relates to compounds that are easily extractable and soluble in soil

solution rendering them more prone to microbial decomposition. This labile N pool

constitutes a small portion (about 2%) of the total soil N and is composed of water-

extractable organic matter N, particulate organic matter N and microbial biomass N (St.

Luce et al., 2013). The labile N pool has also been recognized to be the most dynamic

and bioavailable and have been used as indicator of N supplying capacity of soils (Ros et

al., 2010). The more stable fractions have been identified in the humus fraction due to

changes in chemical structure, accumulation in recalcitrant components and decrease in

accessibility to microorganisms (eg. aggregate formation) as the SOM begins to age.

1.2.2 Nitrogen transformations

1.2.2.1 Nitrogen Mineralization and Immobilization

For SON to become available to plants, it must first be mineralized into mineral N or

small molecular weight organic compounds (Whalen et al., 2013). Nitrogen

mineralization is linked to the decomposition of SOM as the heterotrophic bacteria

responsible for this process require C, N, and other nutrients. The decomposition begins

as the depolymerization of soil polymers by extracellular enzymes followed by

breakdown into monomeric compounds such as amino acids, amines, amino sugars and

urea (Schimel and Bennett, 2004). The process then proceeds by aminization and finally

ammonification to yield NH4 (Havlin et al., 2005). Ammonium does not reside in the soil

solution for an extended period of time in humid temperate climates but either

immediately undergoes nitrification (under optimal oxygen and moisture levels) to yield

NO3, undergoes NH4 fixation, is taken up by plant roots or is immobilized by soil

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microbes (Havlin et al., 2005). Only a small fraction of the organic N is mineralized

during a growing season as the majority is protected from decomposition (Whalen et al.,

2013) and the extent to which N mineralization occurs under field conditions is

dependent on soil physical and chemical properties, soil biotic processes and

management practices (Zebarth et al., 2009; St. Luce et al., 2011).

Chemical properties such as pH and electrical conductivity (EC) directly influence the

activity of microorganisms (Hartel, 2005; St.Luce et al., 2011). The optimum pH for

mineralization is between 5 and 7 and decreases with increasing pH and/or EC. Greater

cation exchange capacity (CEC) reduces leaching losses, therefore increasing the soil N

supply and soils with higher SOM content have greater microbial populations and activity

and therefore higher mineralization rates (Schnurer et al., 1985; Sharifi et al., 2008). Soils

with higher clay content are less susceptible to leaching as they retain water and have the

ability to fix NH4 within clay lattices (Chantigny, 2004), however clay has the potential

to slow N mineralization as clay particles are known to physically protect SOM from

microbial decomposition (Angers et al., 1997; Yoo and Wander, 2006, Kölbl et al., 2006,

Chivenge et al., 2011; Nyiraneza et al., 2012). Sandy soils on the other hand have the

ability mineralize more of their organic N due to better aeration and less physical

protection of the SOM (Griffen, 2008).

Soil biotic processes, including microbial activity and biochemical processes associated

with N mineralization, are mainly controlled by soil moisture and temperature (Kolberg et

al., 1999). Temperature controls oxygen consumption by microorganisms and aerobic

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volume of the soil (Sierra, 1997). Soil moisture regulates oxygen diffusion in the soil and

controls microbial mobility and diffusion of soluble substrates to microbes (Agehara and

Warncke, 2005). When the soil becomes too dry, mobility of the microbes’ decreases and

when soils are too wet, oxygen content decreases resulting in reduced activity (St.Luce et

al., 2011). Under field conditions fluctuating moisture and temperature occur which can

lead to soil rewetting events that cause a flush of N mineralization as microorganisms

resume activity (Griffen, 2008). Optimal conditions for mineralization occur between

25oC and 35oC, but can occur at -2oC in loam soils and -6 oC in clay soils (Clark et al.,

2009), and at a soil moisture content between 50 and 80% field capacity (Whalen and

Sampedro, 2010). Effects of environmental factors on N availability are evident through

current year growing season rainfall and temperature. In years where rainfall is high, the

potential for N losses through leaching and denitrification increases compared to years

with lower than average rainfall. The two are not mutually exclusive and therefore a cooler

growing season with higher rainfall will require higher N fertilizer supplementation for

desired grain yields.

Agricultural practices such as tillage and addition of organic (crop residues) and mineral

fertilizers impact N mineralization and soil N supply through their effect on the SON

fractions (section 1.2.1.2). Other management practices such as including cover crops or

legumes into the rotation increases N availability through N fixation and retention of

residual soil NO3 following harvest of the main crop (Vyn et al., 2000; Mueller and

Thorup-Kristensen, 2001; St.Luce et al., 2011). Carpenter-Boggs et al. (2000) found that

inclusion of alfalfa (Medicago sativa) into the rotation increased the net N mineralized

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during 189-day field temperature incubation by 56 kg ha-1 compared to a continuous corn

rotation and by 47 kg ha-1 compared with a corn soybean rotation. Inclusion of wheat

into the rotation has also shown to increase the total N content of soils (Van Eerd et al.,

2014) and can be attributed to the high N rhizosphere deposition from wheat. If the

current years crop is corn however the late harvest date (September to October) generally

does not allow a cover crop to establish prior to snowfall, exemplifying the importance of

matching fertilizer rates to corn N demand.

1.2.2.2 Nitrogen losses

In humid temperate environments, N can be lost from the root zone through several

pathways: NO3 leaching, denitrification, ammonia (NH3) volatilization and NH4 fixation

by soil clay. The latter, NH3 volatilization and NH4 fixation are significantly less

compared to leaching and denitrification in humid environments (Janzen, 2003).

Ammonia volatilization, the transformation of NH4 to NH3, is mainly dependent on pH

(Cameron et al., 2013) and N fertilizer incorporation (Havlin et al., 2005; Griggs et al.,

2007; Soares et al., 2012). Ammonium fixation is dependent on clay content as up to 34%

of added NH4 can be fixed within clay lattices (Chantigny et al., 2004).

In humid temperate regions like Ontario where average growing season precipitation is

greater than 300 mm (Environment Canada, 2014), NO3 leaching from the root zone into

surface waters is the most significant pathway of N loss and has been linked to

environmental concerns such as eutrophication of freshwater bodies and nitrate poisoning

of drinking water (Mulvaney et al., 2008). In Ontario, residual soil NO3 following crop

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harvest increases the risk of NO3 leaching. De Jong et al. (2009) found that 47 kg N ha-1

of NO3 was leached from agricultural fields during the off season in Ontario between

1981 and 2006. Nitrogen fertilization exceeding crop N requirements is the major

contributor to increased concentrations of residual soil NO3 (Ziadi et al., 2012) and the

presence of tile drainage increases losses by 30-50% compared with native drainage

(Randall and Goss, 2008). The amount of residual soil N and subsequent leaching also

depends on precipitation, soil texture, crop rotation and tillage (St.Luce et al., 2011;

Rasouli et al., 2014).

Corn in Ontario receives high amounts of mineral fertilizers to reach maximum yields

and over fertilization is one of the leading causes of high residual soil NO3. The two most

common forms of N fertilizer for corn in Ontario are urea (solid) and urea ammonium

nitrate (UAN, liquid). Producers typically apply N in the spring at planting, at the pre-

sidedress stage (when corn in at the 6 leaf stage) or as a split application (pre-plant and

pre-sidedress) to avoid N losses (OMAFRA, 2009). More accurate rates that match crop

N demand can significantly reduce residual soil NO3 and its loss from fields to surface

waters (Mitsch et al., 2011; Rasouli et al., 2014).

Denitrification, the transformation of nitrate to atmospheric N (N2, N2O, NOx), occurs

mainly in soils that are waterlogged for an extended period of time (2-3 days) resulting in

low oxygen concentrations allowing denitrifying bacteria to utilize NO3 for metabolic

processes (Bremner and Shaw, 1958). The majority (30-90%) of denitrification losses in

humid temperate climates occurs during the spring thaw (Smith et al., 2004; Wagner-

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Riddle et al., 2007) and increases with N fertilization rate (Chantigny et al., 1998).

Incomplete denitrification results in nitrous oxide emissions and is influenced by tillage,

N source and timing of application (Drury et al., 2012).

1.2.3 Soil N Supply

Soil N supply is defined as the sum of the residual soil mineral N (NH4 and NO3) present

in spring from the previous growing season plus the amount of N that is mineralized

throughout the current years’ growing season (Zebarth et al., 2005; Whalen et al., 2013).

As stated in section 1.2.2.2 leaching of residual soil NO3 in the off season is substantial in

humid temperate climates and therefore the soil N supply is dominated by SON

mineralization during the growing season. The soil N supply has the potential to supply

large amounts of N to the growing crop (Wu et al., 2008; Zebarth et al., 2009; St.Luce et

al., 2011). Nyiraneza et al. (2012) found the soil N supplying capacity of 19 sites under

diverse cropping systems across Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick ranged between 13

and 198 kg N ha-1. Dessureault-Rompre et al. (2011) measured the soil N supply for

potato in eastern Canada to be between 50 and 175 kg N ha-1, Wu et al. (2008) measured

the soil N supply through the use of resin bags to range between 96 and 120 kg N ha-1 for

corn in Ottawa and St. Luce et al. (2013) calculated the soil N supply (measured as

Canola N uptake) in western Canada to range between 26 and 229 kg N ha-1. The soil N

supply is ultimately controlled by factors that affect soil N mineralization potential

(Zebarth et al., 2009; St.Luce et al., 2011).

Besides the adverse effects of over-application of mineral fertilizers, proper N

management can also lead to a higher nutritional value of field crops. Nitrogen is one of

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the essential macronutrients required by plants to grow and reproduce through its

presence in DNA, RNA, proteins (enzymes), chlorophyll, ATP, auxin and cytokins

(Andrews et al., 2013). Upon application of high amounts high synthetic fertilizers (N-

phosphorus (P)- potassium (K)), nitrates can accumulate in plant tissues and be

carcinogenic upon consumption to both humans and animals (Albrecht, 1992;

Santamaria, 2006; Sutton et al., 2011). Increasing the SOM content has other beneficial

effect besides increased soil N supply as the SOM is a natural chelator for micronutrients

essential for the production and synthesis of carbohydrates, proteins, vitamins, hormones

and other complex N compounds necessary in plant physiology (Watson, 2012). In

addition, mineral fertilizers have shown various other negative effects to the soil

including: detrimental effects on soil biology by inhibiting mycorrhizal fungi and N2

fixing symbionts; the loss of SOM which is responsible for proper soil aeration, structure

and plant nutrient availability; decrease in soil pH; and can cause a decline in crop yields

(Paungfoo-Lonhienne et al., 2012). Maintaining the capacity of soils to supply N, which

consists mainly of organic N present within the organic matter portion, is the next step in

sustainable crop production.

1.3 Current status of N recommendations for corn in Ontario

Corn is grown on 890 thousand hectares of cropland in Ontario and constitutes

approximately 63% of the province’s annual grain harvest (OMAFRA, 2013). The main

cropping system in Ontario is a corn- soybean-wheat rotation and the high N demand of

corn (180 kg N ha-1 on average) results in large applications of mineral N fertilizers. It is

estimated that 85-90 million tons of nitrogenous fertilizer are applied to the soil every year

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across the globe (Warren, 2014). However, N use efficiency (NUE) in Ontario remains

low (40-65%) and a large portion (87%) of N taken up by the plant remains originated

from mineralization of SON (Stevens et al., 2005; Wu et al., 2008). This low NUE

combined with corn’s high N demand can result in substantial economic losses for

growers.

An accredited soil test for the contribution of SON mineralization to crop N uptake

currently does not exist in Ontario. Nitrogen fertilizer recommendations for corn

production in Ontario are computed using NO3 concentrations in the soil at planting

(PPNT) and/or at the side-dress stage (PSNT) or using the corn N calculator established

by OMAFRA (2010). This tool determines N fertilizer rates based on soil type, previous

management history, crop heat units (CHU), projected corn market prices and N fertilizer

cost.

1.3.1 Pre-plant nitrate test (PPNT)

For the PPNT, soil samples are taken within 10 days of planting (5 days before or after)

and analyzed for NO3. The concentration of NO3 in the soil prior to planting can be a

useful indicator of carryover N and early season N mineralization and can be used to

adjust for fertilizer application at planting (Greenwood, 1986; Bundy and Andraski,

2004; Sharifi et al., 2007). This test has proven successful in dry climates where residual

N is a major component of the soil N supply (Zebarth et al., 2001) but the high and

variable early season rainfall in humid climates decreases the accuracy of N

recommendations (Sharifi et al., 2007;; St. Luce et al., 2011). In addition O’Halloran et al.

(2004) found that soil NO3 from 0-30cm was not a good predictor of corn yield or yield

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response to fertilizer application in southwestern Ontario due to within-field variability.

1.3.2 Pre-sidedress nitrate test (PSNT)

The pre-sidedress nitrate test (PSNT) has gained popularity because of its accuracy to

determine NO3 levels when the corn plant is 15-30 cm tall (V5 stage) (Fox et al., 1989),

just prior to rapid plant N uptake and the application of side-dress N fertilizers. Unlike

the PPNT, this method allows more time for sampling for the farmer, allows

determination of NO3 that has mineralized from organic sources during the spring months

and more accurately reflects total available N than the PPNT. The PSNT has been most

useful in predicting non-responsive areas (prevents over-fertilization) and has effectively

predicted corn response to applied N fertilizer over a wide geographic range (Magdoff et

al., 1984; Blackmer et al., 1989; Magdoff et al., 1990; Magdoff, 1991). Results from 52

corn N response trials conducted in Ontario from 1986 to 1990 showed that NO3 taken at

the pre-sidedress from 0-60cm was a good predictor of recommended N (R2=0.73) with a

critical concentration of 23 mg kg-1 (OMAFRA, 2009). In 2015, the PSNT was modified

by OMAFRA to include expected yield, omitted in previous PSNT test. Critical levels for

the new PSNT range from 22.5 to 32.5 mg kg-1 soil depending on expected yield

(OMAFRA, 2015). Although the PSNT has shown greater accuracy in predicting crop N

needs its accessibility to producers due to the requirement of side-dressing equipment, the

large soil spatial variability and changes in concentration over a short period of time has

hindered its widespread use (Beauchamp et al., 2004; Ma et al., 2007).

1.4 Methods of predicting soil N supply

A variety of laboratory and field based methods exist to determine plant available N from

mineralization of SON. Laboratory based methods can be separated into two categories:

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biological and chemical. These methods attempt to isolate a fraction or pool of organic N

that will become available to the crop over the growing season. The majority of studies

use chemical methods as a relatively rapid alternative to the biological method which

measures potentially mineralizable N (N0) using a long-term aerobic soil incubation (>20

weeks) under controlled conditions. The acceptance of a rapid measure of plant available

N has in the past been focused on satisfying its ability to predict N0 and N supply in the

field (Sharifi et al., 2007; Schomberg et al., 2009). To date, no robust measure has been

adopted as a soil N test that is both a predictor of mineralizable N and plant available N

in the field. This is due to the inconsistencies across studies in extraction conditions and

furthermore the large variability in climate and soil characteristics across a wide

geographical area (St.Luce et al., 2011).

1.4.1 Laboratory-based indicators of soil N supply

1.4.1.1 Biological tests

The capacity for a soil to supply N is measured using soil incubation. These incubations

can be short or long term (2-24+ weeks), can be performed under aerobic or anaerobic

conditions, and can vary in incubation moisture and temperature conditions (St Luce et

al., 2011). Typically, the amount of N mineralized over 20+ weeks under optimal

moisture and temperature conditions is run through a first order kinetic model, first

developed by Stanford and Smith (1972) and later modified by Curtin and Campbell

(2008), to predict potentially mineralizable N (N0). The first order kinetic model can be

expressed as a single exponential model with the following equation:

Nmin= N0 [1-e-kt]

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where Nmin is the cumulative amount of N mineralized at time t, N0 is potentially

mineralizable N, and k is the mineralization rate constant. The N0 is an indicator of the

soils capacity to supply N and it is hypothesized to release the fraction of SON

responsible for the release of mineral N from microbial action over a growing season.

Several modifications have been made to more accurately predict N0. Most

recently, Sharifi et al. (2007) characterized three different pools of mineralizable N:

Pool I: the flush in mineral N that occurs in the first 2 week period following

rewetting (represents a labile organic-N pool)

Pool II: cumulative amount of N mineralized between weeks 2 and 24 (represents

an intermediate pool of organic N)

Pool III: the amount of N that was potentially mineralizable but did not mineralize

throughout the incubation period (calculated by different between N0 predicted from

curve fitting and the cumulative amount of N mineralized between weeks 2 and 24 (Pool

II))

Such laboratory incubations are time consuming and laborious and therefore not suitable

for routine soil testing. Therefore, relatively rapid chemical tests have been developed in

attempt to predict N mineralized during the aerobic incubation. Besides being time

consuming, incubation conditions are also not representative of field conditions. This

method excludes naturally occurring cycles including drying and rewetting (Mikha et al.,

2005; Appel, 1998; Cabrera, 1993), the role of soil macro-fauna (Whalen et al., 2013)

and priming effects (Kuzyakov et al., 2000; Kuzyakov, 2010) on N turnover. Overall, this

laboratory method is effective for measuring the size of the mineralizable N pool,

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however its use as an indicator of plant available N under field conditions is not well

supported by the literature (Sharifi et al., 2007; Dessureault-Rompre et al., 2011;

Nyrianeza et al., 2012).

Pool I defined by Sharifi et al. (2007) is a labile mineralizable N pool released in the first

two weeks of the long-term aerobic incubation and is generally excluded from the first

order kinetic model, as it is known to represent an initial flush of N due to rewetting.

Sharifi et al. (2007) and Dessureault et al. (2010, 2011) found a significant relationship

between plant available N and Pool I and the relationship was improved when including

soil properties and climatic factors using multiple regression. Nyiraneza et al. (2012) also

found a stronger a correlation between soil N supply and Pool I (r=0.41) than with Pool II

(r=0.28) or N0 (r=0.09). Various studies measuring the size of Pool I have shown the

concentration to vary from as low as 5.7 mg N kg-1 in soils from Spain (Villar et al.,

2014) to as high as 61 mg N kg -1 soil (Nyiraneza et al., 2012) in soils from across

Canada. In these studies, Pool I represented 7% to 45% of the total N released during the

remaining 2-24 weeks. It has been suggested that determination of the release pattern of

Pool I has the potential lead to a better understanding of this labile pool of organic N and

its validation as a plant available N index (Dessaureult-Rompre et al., 2011).

1.4.1.2 Chemical tests

Chemical tests are relatively rapid alternatives to the long-term aerobic incubation and

can be tailored to predict the crop available mineralizable soil N (Ros et al., 2011).

Chemical methods in most studies are compared to both parameters measured during the

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long-term aerobic incubation and in-field N mineralization parameters to validate their

use as an indicator of mineralizable N. A brief explanation of promising chemical tests in

terms of their ability to predict soil N supply will be reviewed.

Hot-KCl-NH4

The hot-KCl-NH4 extraction involves heating of soil and 2M KCl to 100oC for 4h and is

said to extract soluble and exchangeable pool of NH4, hydrolyzed organic N and N

compounds released from lysed microbial cells (St. Luce et al., 2011). In some cases, the

concentration of KCl-NH4 extracted at room temperature is subtracted from hot-KCl-NH4

and the difference termed hydrolyzed NH4. A significant relationship was observed

between N0 measured in a 24-week aerobic incubation at 35oC and Hot-KCl-NH4

(R2=0.78, P<0.001) in soils from Saskatchewan, Canada. McDonald et al. (2014) also

observed a moderate correlation between hot-KCl-NH4 and N mineralized using 7-day

anaerobic incubation (r=0.49, P<0.01) in grassland soils in Ireland. In soils sampled from

cornfields across Canada Nyiraneza et al. (2012) found hot-KCl-NH4 correlated with N0

(r=0.31, P<0.05) and soil N supply (r=0.28, P<0.05) and this relationship improved for

fine textured soils (r=0.68, P<0.01) but not for coarse to medium textured soils (r=0.34).

This indicates that the chemical parameter is influenced by clay particles, as clay is

known to have more exchange sites to hold NH4, which may be extracted upon heating.

Predictive ability of this test has shown mixed results with field based measures of N

mineralization and the chemical nature of organic N hydrolyzed during the extraction is

still unknown (St. Luce et al., 2011).

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Illinois Soil Nitrogen Test (ISNT)

The Illinois Soil Nitrogen Test (ISNT), developed by Khan et al. (2001) and later

modified by Mulvaney et al. (2001) involves treatment of soil with sodium hydroxide to

release hydrolysable N in the form of amino sugar-N, amino acid-N and NH4+ as

ammonia that is caught by boric acid placed above soil extract in a sealed mason jar at

48oC. The ISNT estimates the amino acid N fraction and was first used to identify soils

that were unresponsive to fertilizer N at a success rate of 94% (Khan et al., 2001;

Mulvaney et al., 2001). This method is sensitive to soil properties and management

practices but has to date only shown positive results for corn fertilizer recommendations

(St.Luce et al., 2011). It has been related to corn yield response to N fertilization and has

shown relatively good correlations with N0 (St.Luce et al., 2011; Sharifi et al., 2007,

Mulvaney et al., 2001). The ISNT showed significant correlations with N0 (0.39>r>0.68)

in soils taken from corn fields across Canada (Nyiraneza, et al., 2012) and with N

mineralized during a 7-day aerobic incubation (r=0.83, P<0.001) from grassland soils

(Macdonald et al., 2014). Its relationship with the soil incubation test parameters may

indicate that compounds extracted using the ISNT are a food source for microbes.

From an in-field standpoint, it has shown promise in predicting the economic optimum N

rates (EONR) for corn in poor and well-drained soils in southeastern USA (R2=0.87 and

0.78, respectively) (Williams et al., 2007). Recent research in New York has also led to

the development of a modified ISNT curve that incorporates organic matter estimated by

loss-on-ignition (LOI) and was successful in predicting the N response of corn (83%) but

only in its second year following sod or soybean (Lawrence et al., 2007).

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Ultraviolet (UV) bicarbonate extraction

The UV bicarbonate extraction involves extracting soil with a 0.01M bicarbonate

solution and measuring the absorbance of the extract at 205nm and 260nm (Maclean,

1964). The UV absorbance at 205nm is a measure of soil mineral and organic N, while

absorbance at 260nm is a measure of soluble organic N. Mixed results of the UV

absorbance method have been observed (St.Luce et al., 2011) and the interpretation of

absorbencies and how they relate to N availability to crops has not been thoroughly

researched. In a study done on soils from corn fields across Canada, absorbance at 205nm

had significant correlations with both N0 (r=0.41) and soil N supply (r=0.41) but the

absorbance at 260 was more strongly correlated to N0 (r=0.38) than soil N supply (r=-

0.02) (Nyiraneza et al., 2012).

Soluble labile organic N fractions

According to Ros et al. (2011) soluble organic matter, dissolved organic matter (DOM)

or extractable organic matter (EOM) can be used interchangeably and is measured by

extracting a fraction of SOM based on its solubility in water, with and without the

addition of salts. In contrast, Chantigny et al. (2003), Herbert and Bertsch (1995) and

Zsolnay (1996) operationally define DOM as the organic matter <0.45 𝜇m in size present

in the soil solution. These fractions can include but are not limited to the cold water

extractable OM (WEOM), hot-water extractable (hot-WEOM) and salt extractable OM

(SEOM). The organic C (WEOC) and organic N (WEON) are typically measured within

these fractions and are used as indicators of plant available N in soils. It has been

hypothesized that the WEOM and hot-WEOM may be precursors for DOM which can be

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mineralized by microbes present in to the soil solution (Zsolnay, 2003) and are the most

dynamic and bioavailable fraction of OM within soils (Haynes, 2000) as a large portion

of N mineralized throughout the growing season originates from labile organic N

fractions (Gutser et al., 2005; Sharifi et al., 2007; Chantigny et al., 2008).

Approximately 0.75% of total soil N can be composed of WEOM and 2.6 to 8.7% as hot-

WEOM (Curtin et al., 2006). Gregorich et al. (2003) measured the WEOC, WEON, hot-

WEOC and hot-WEON in a corn monoculture receiving no amendment and in a corn-

soybean rotation receiving 100 kg N ha-1. They found that the WEOC and WEON in the

monoculture was lower (283 mg C kg-1, 22 mg N kg-1) than the corn-soybean rotation

(307 mg C kg-1; 24 mg kg-1 N) and the hot-WEOM concentrations were on average twice

as high as the WEOM. Studies have shown that such labile OM fractions are sensitive to

management changes (Chantigny, 2003) and the WEOC: WEON ratio is a robust

indicator of a soils potential to mineralize N (Haney et al., 2012). The biodegradability

of these fractions were assessed by Gregorich et al. (2003) for soils under corn

production receiving manure, fertilizer or no amendment. The authors found that the

WEOM extracted in hot water was more biodegradable than that extracted in cold water.

The WEOM fraction generally contains 2 pools of OM, one that is rapidly decomposed in

<1day and another than has a turnover of about 80 days. These results indicate that the

SOM extracted using water is an N rich source of labile OM for microbes and the

composition changes with management practices.

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Microbial Activity

The microbial community present and their activity is important in SON mineralization

and therefore quantifying the size and the capability of the microbial community can

result in an indication of soil fertility (Harmel and Haney, 2013). Currently there are two

widely used methods that determine either microbial biomass (MB) (chloroform

fumigation) or microbial activity (CO2 emissions). The fumigation procedure measures

the amount of microbial biomass carbon (MBC) and nitrogen (MBN) to attempt to

quantify the size of the microbial community present within soils. The fumigation

method has shown mixed results to predict soil N supply (Deng et al., 2000;

Franzluebbers et al., 2000; Willson et al., 2001; Sharifi et al., 2007; St Luce et al., 2011)

and contains two major short falls: over estimation of MBC and N from inclusion of C

and N not originating from MB, and its potential to misrepresent the importance of

biomass size on organic matter mineralization as the size has been shown to remain stable

throughout the growing season (Hassnick et al., 1993; Puri and Ashman, 1998; Alessi et

al., 2011).

The CO2 emissions test measures C mineralization by the amount of CO2 produced in a

specified period of time and directly relates to microbial respiration during the

decomposition of SOM. Various methods have been used in the past that differs in

method of quantification (titration (Stotzky, 1965), gas chromatography (Mondini et al.,

2010), infrared gas analyzer for CO2 detector (Haney et al., 2008)), length of incubation

(1 day to 28 days; Franzluebbers, 1999) and preparation of soils (field-moist vs. rewetting

of dried soils; Haney et al., 2004). The CO2 emission following a 1-day incubation period

has shown strong correlation with the standard 28-day incubation period (Marumoto et

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al., 1982; Sparling et al., 1997; Haney et al., 2001). Haney et al. (2008) reported the 1 day

CO2 from chemical titration and the Solvita soil test in treated and un-treated soils has a

strong correlation to 28 and 7-28 day C mineralization incubation experiments, indicating

that the initial flush may be a strong indicator of the quality and amount SOM present

within the soil.

Marumoto et al. (1982), Sparing et al. (1997) and Haney et al. (2008) suggest that the

CO2 emissions test can provide an estimate of N mineralization as microbial

decomposition of SOM is responsible for the availability of N to plants. Haney et al.

(2008) found that the 1-day CO2 emission was significantly related to the initial WEON

(R2=0.86) and C (R2=0.76) indicating that this fraction of SOM may be a source of food

for microbes and merits further investigation into the link between these two pools of

labile organic N. More recently the 1-day CO2 flush following soil rewetting showed

strong relationships to grain yield in Texas (R2=0.84) and to grain N uptake in Oklahoma

(R2=0.63) (Briton and Haney, 2013). This test has the potential to provide a better

indicator of the size of the labile soil organic pool, the quality of this pool and properties

of soil biota (Gestel et al., 1992), important factors in maintaining the integrity and

productivity of agricultural soils.

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Light fraction organic matter carbon and nitrogen (LFOMC and

LFOMN) and Particulate organic matter carbon and nitrogen (POMC

and POMN)

The light fraction organic matter C and N (LFOMC, LFOMN) and particulate organic

matter C and N (POMC, POMN) fractions can be isolated through density and size

fractionation, respectively. The POM is separated through sieving and is the size fraction

between 53 and 250𝜇m (Gregorich and Beare, 2008). The LFOM is more related to fresh

residues and has a higher C:N ratio than the POM fraction, which is composed of

partially decomposed plant residues together with microbial byproducts. Both have been

defined as an intermediate pool of OM between freshly added plant residues and

stabilized organic matter, a major source of C and N for microbes and the pathway

through which N and C are transformed into stabilized SOM (Gregorich et al., 2006;

Wander, 2004; Haynes, 2005; St. Luce et al., 2011).

The LFOMC and N and POMC and N has shown to constitute 8 and 5% for LFOM and

22% and 18%for POM of total soil organic C and N, respectively (St.Luce et al., 2011).

The POMC and N fractions have shown sensitivity to management practices in the short

term (Christensen, 1992; Angers et al., 1993; Franzleubbers and Stuedemann, 2008) and

the POMC fraction has been shown to be affected by tillage. Six et al. (1999) found that

POMC was 51% lower under conventional tillage than no tillage, while the same was not

observed for the LFOC fraction (Liang et al., 1998). Inclusion of crop residues over the

long-term also increases the POM fraction (Biederbeck et al., 1998; Spargo et al., 2011).

It’s use as a predictor of soil N supply for Ontario is scarce. The POMN has shown a

moderate relationship with plant N uptake (R2=0.51) for potato production in Maine,

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USA, a strong correlation to corn grain yield (r=0.72) and corn N uptake (r=0.63) in

Maryland, USA and a moderate relationship with canola yield and N uptake (R2=0.56,

P<0.001 and 0.69, P<0.001) in western Canada (St.Luce et al., 2014). St. Luce et al.

(2011) suggest that the nutrient availability and composition of these fractions is required

in order to understand their contribution to the soil N supply.

1.4.2 Field-based indicators of soil N supply

Plant based measures of N availability can have an advantage over laboratory indicators

as they are direct indicators of the availability of N to plants and can evaluate the

synchrony of plant N demand and N supply (Zebarth et al., 2009). The effectiveness of

plant diagnostics is often hindered due to other factors other than N availability (Olfs et

al., 2005) such as disease, drought and other nutrient limitations.

1.4.2.1. Crop response

In the field, N availability can be measured using grain yield, plant N concentration and

soil mineral N at harvest. Since N is the major limiting factor for plants, grain yield is a

direct reflection of N availability for cereal crops assuming no other factors are limiting

(Zebarth et al., 2009). The plant N uptake is a measure of the N available under field

conditions, as the amount of nutrient in the soil does not always reflect its availability to

plants (Binkley and Vitousek, 1989). By combining the plant N uptake and soil mineral N

at harvest, the soil N supply or the amount of N mineralized over the growing season

under field conditions can be estimated (Zebarth et al., 2009; Whalen et al., 2013).

Crop response indicators are measurements that evaluate the soil N supply to the field

crop and allow accurate prediction of the economic rate of N when developing fertilizer

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N recommendations (Lory and Scharf, 2003). The most popular methods to evaluate the

fields soil N supply through relative yield (RY) or delta yield (∆Y), defined as the

increase in grain yield over zero N application obtained from applying fertilizer at the

most economic rate (Kachanoski et al., 1996) and is also a method of farmers to evaluate

their fertilizer application rates (Lory and Scharf, 2003). Two useful measurements can

be made from RY or ∆Y, 1) the ability for that soil to supply N and 2) site specific

response to N. This will provide an indicator of the pool of soil N that is available for

crop uptake and the response to applied N will provide an indicator of the effectiveness

of additional N.

1.6 Conclusion

A large group of laboratory and field-based methods exist for assessing the contribution

of N mineralization to corn N uptake. These methods however have not been extensively

evaluated under the climate, management practices and soil characteristics for corn

production in southwestern Ontario. An ideal laboratory method would consider the

mineralizable N as this approach has the potential to relieve environmental and economic

burdens associated with over application of N fertilizers.

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1.7 Thesis Objectives

This thesis has three primary objectives

1) To predict corn N availability in the humid temperate climate of southwestern

Ontario

2) To evaluate the ability of a series of laboratory-based indicators of mineralizable

N

3) To assess the ability of successful laboratory-based indicators of mineralizable N

to predict N application rates for corn in southwestern Ontario

To achieve these objectives, the study will be split into two field seasons. In the first year,

laboratory-based indicators will be evaluated using correlation with relative yield (soil

test correlation) and in the second year, promising laboratory-based indicators will be

calibrated to determine N fertilizer recommendations (soil test calibration) using corn N

response trials.

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Chapter 2. Evaluating laboratory-based indicators to predict N availability to corn in southwestern Ontario 2.0 Abstract

The pre-plant soil nitrate is a variable component of soil N supply in the humid temperate

climate of southwestern Ontario. The objective of this study were to quantify the capacity

of southwestern Ontario soils to supply N (N0) to the crop, and evaluate a suite of

chemical and biological N mineralization soil tests as indicators of crop N availability for

twelve southwestern Ontario soils. Soils were collected from the 0-30-cm depth and

aerobically incubated at 25°C for 24-wk and analyzed for selected soil N tests. Nitrogen

availability indices were tested against relative yield as the field index of N supply. The

average potentially mineralizable N was 147 mg kg-1 and the Pool I mean was 42 mg kg-

1, representing 31% of the total N mineralized during the incubation. The pre-plant nitrate

test (PPNT) was weakly correlated to crop N availability indicators. The top

mineralizable N tests for predicting crop N availability were Pool I and Pool I + soil

mineral N at planting (SMNp) but this relationship was dependent on soil clay content

(coarse textured soil (clay ≤ 240 g kg-1): r=0.79; medium textured soil

(clay > 240 g kg-1): r=-0.59). This study showed that southwestern Ontario soils have a

high capacity to supply N to corn and Pool I can better predict relative yield in

southwestern Ontario compared to the PPNT in 2013.

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2.1 Introduction

Soil nitrogen (N) mineralization is an important but variable component of soil N supply

to crops in humid temperate environments (Zebarth et al., 2009; Whalen et al., 2013).

Soil N mineralization can supply 20-80% of crop N requirement during the growing

season (Broadbent, 1984; Zebarth et al., 2009). No robust index of soil organic nitrogen

(SON) mineralization exists and has resulted in less accurate fertilizer N

recommendations and low N use efficiency in field crops (Lobell, 2007; Sharifi et al.,

2007). Pre-plant N fertilizer recommendations for corn (Zea Mays) in Ontario are based

on the pre-plant nitrate (NO3) test (PPNT) (Verhallen and LeBoeuf, 2009) or solely on

crop N requirement. Development of a laboratory index of mineralizable soil N can

improve the accuracy of fertilizer N recommendations and consequently optimize corn

yields while reducing the environmental risks of excess N.

The current fertilizer N recommendation tool, PPNT, provides a snap shot of NO3

concentration in the field and can provide an indication of residual soil N from the

previous growing season and early season N mineralization when limited leaching has

occurred (Sharifi et al., 2009). In humid temperate climates the large spatial variability

and unpredictable rainfall can rapidly alter NO3 concentrations resulting in residual soil

mineral N and applied N being leached from the root zone (Tan et al., 2002; Scharf et al.,

2006; Lobell 2007; Zebarth et al., 2009). Therefore, N originating from in-season SON

mineralization is an important source of N for crops.

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The standard laboratory method to measure SON mineralization is the long-term aerobic

incubation (>20 weeks) (Standford and Smith, 1972). The measured potentially

mineralizable N (N0) can be sub-divided into three pools: Pool I, and Pool II and Pool III

(Sharifi et al., 2007). Pool I is a readily mineralizable N pool and represents between 7 to

45% of the total N mineralized throughout the incubation (Sharifi et al., 2007; Dessureault

Rompre et al., 2010, 2011; Nyiraneza et al., 2012; Villar et al., 2014). Pool I has been

reported as the most sensitive pool to management practices (Sharifi et al., 2008). Pool II

is the intermediate pool of mineralizable N and represents the remaining of total N

mineralized. Pool III is a more stable pool of mineralizable N that does not release during

the incubation.

The long-term aerobic soil incubation is time consuming, laborious and not usually a

strong indicator of in field N availability to crops (St. Luce et al., 2011). Therefore, the use

of relatively rapid laboratory indicators that can predict mineralizable N is a more practical

alternative (Ros et al., 2011). For example, St. Luce et al. (2013) found particulate organic

matter N (POMN) to be significantly related to canola (Brassica napus L.) yield and N

uptake (R2=0.56 and 0.69) in western Canada. Also, the soil microbial activity, measured

as the 1-day CO2 flush following soil rewetting, has also shown strong relationships with

grain yield in Texas (R2=0.84) and to grain N uptake in Oklahoma (R2=0.63) (Briton and

Haney, 2013). Haney et al. (2012) found that the flush of CO2 after rewetting of dried soil

was related to the amount of soil carbon (C) present in a water extract (WEOC, r=0.87).

They reported that the ratio between WEOC and organic N in a water extract (WEON)

was a strong indicator of the quality of a readily available pool of substrate for microbes,

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in soils collected throughout the US. Other promising tests include the Illinois soil N test

(ISNT; Williams et al., 2007), UV absorbance of a sodium bicarbonate extract (Sharifi et

al., 2007) and hot-KCl extractable ammonium (NH4; Nyiraneza et al., 2012).

Laboratory indicators of mineralizable N have not been thoroughly evaluated as indices of

soil N supply in Ontario and therefore it is hypothesized that a soil mineralizable N test

can better predict the soil N supply for grain corn in Ontario compared to the current pre-

plant N test (PPNT). The primary objectives of this research were to i) determine soil N

mineralization parameters of selected Ontario soils to determine the potential of soils to

supply N using the long-term aerobic soil incubation, ii) extract soils using a series of

mineralizable N tests iii) evaluate soil N mineralization parameters and mineralizable N

tests to predict field-based indicators of crop N availability to grain corn across

southwestern Ontario. To accomplish this, soils from a large region in southwestern

Ontario, Canada cropped to grain corn with varying soil properties were used.

2.2 Materials and Methods

2.2.1 Site description and plot setup

Twelve field sites were selected across southwestern Ontario in 2013. Sites were selected

to encompass a broad range of soil chemical and physical properties to properly represent

the variability in growing conditions across southwestern Ontario (Figure 2.1, Table

2.1). These sites were located on growers fields in Ilderton, Strathroy, Woodstock (Hart

and Rutherford), Moorefield, Mount Hope, Bornholm and Lucan, ON and at the Elora

Research Station (ERS) with the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food (OMAFRA)

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and the University of Guelph (Lauzon), at the Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

research center in Woodslee (Woodslee) and at the University of Guelph Ridgetown

Campus (U of G-Ridgetown). Soil properties were measured on 0-30 cm pre-plant

composite soil samples. Soil texture varied from 86 g kg-1 to 440 g kg-1 clay and pH

ranged from 6.6 to 8.5 with an average of 7.6. Total C ranged between 11.8-25.4 g kg-1

with an average of 20.7 g kg-1 and total N ranged between 0.94 and 2.1 with an average

of 1.7 g kg-1. The C:N ratio of soils ranged from 10 to 20 with an average of 13. Previous

year (2012) crops included soybean, winter wheat and corn under conventional

management receiving only mineral fertilizer as the N source. Crop heat units (CHU)

varied from 2680 (Elora) to 3560 (Woodslee) and all sites were located in a humid

temperate climate regime with a 2013 average growing season air temperature of 16 oC,

ranging from 15.3 to 17.8 oC, and growing season rainfall of 573 mm, ranging from 422

to 748 mm, close to the 30 year historical average of 16.1oC and 530 mm of rainfall

(Environment Canada, 2015).

At each field site, plots were set up in a randomized complete block design with an area

of at least 32 by 16m. Two N fertilizer rates were applied at planting (a zero N control

and an optimal rate of N) as treatments in replicate of four. Optimal N rates were applied

based on corn N requirement and/or spring soil test and ranged between 92 and 224 kg N

ha-1 (Table 2.1). All sites were then cropped with grain corn and fertilizer was applied at

planting as 28% urea ammonium nitrate (UAN-28-0-0).

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Figure 2.1 Map of locations of experimental field sites in southwestern Ontario in 2013. n=12.

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Table 2.1. Summary of characteristics for 12 experimental sites established in southwestern Ontario (n=4).

Site Location Latitude and

Longitude

Growing season

rainfall§

Mean growing season air

temperature§

Crop Heat Unit

(CHU)# Previous Crop

Optimal N rate

(kg N ha-1) Soil Classification Soil Texture† pH¶ Total

C Total

N C/N ratio

oN, oW Clay Silt Sand

g kg-1‡

mm oC g kg-1 g kg-1 Ilderton 43o11’, 81o30’ 748 N/A 2900 Winter wheat 224 London loam 194 438 367 7.7 20.7 1.6 13

Strathroy 42o96’, 81o65’ 654 17.3 2900 Soybean 151 Berrien sandy loam 191 157 652 6.6 11.8 0.94 12

Hart 43o13’, 80o82’ 492 16.9 2890 Soybean 224 London loam 192 320 431 7.7 23.0 2.1 11

Rutherford 43o13’, 80o82’ 492 16.9 2890 Grain corn 224 Perth silt loam 112 373 487 7.6 16.1 1.6 20

Moorefield 43o75’, 80o77’ 670 15.3 2700 Winter wheat 224 Perth loam 225 546 228 7.8 21.1 1.8 12

Mount Hope 43o15’, 79o89’ 422 16.6 3210 Soybean 224 Brantford silt loam 270 491 411 7.9 19.5 1.7 11

Bornholm 43o52’ 81o13’ 720 N/A 2820 Winter wheat 224 Perth clay loam 1 274 584 141 6.8 23.6 1.8 13

Lucan 43o20’, 81o39’ 601 16.9 2900 Winter wheat 184 Huron clay loam 1 359 529 112 6.5 16.1 1.5 11

ERS-OMAFRA 43o65’, 80o39’ 701 15.3 2680 Soybean 224 Woolwich silt loam 1 87 470 442 8.0 19.2 1.7 12

ERS-Lauzon 43o65’, 80o39’ 701 15.3 2680 Soybean 92 Woolwich silt loam 1 86 459 454 8.4 19.2 1.7 20

Woodslee 42o13’, 82o44’ 344 17.8 3560 Grain corn 200 Brookston clay loam 1 406 336 258 7.0 19.1 2.0 10

U-of-G-Ridgetown 42o44’, 81o87’ 479 16.9 3340 Wheat 200 Brookston clay loam 1 440 250 310 7.5 25.4 2.0 13

Mean (n=42)∞ 573 16.1 2847

230 378 411 7.6 20.7 1.7 13

SD (n=42) 127 1.40 406.8

112 109 134 0.6 6.5 0.51 40 § From May to October: http://climate.weather.gc.ca/prods_servs/cdn_climate_summary_e.html # OMAFRA Factsheet: Crop Heat Units for Corn and other Warm Season Crops in Ontario † Pipette method (Gee and Bauder, 1986) ¶ pH in water (1:2 soil/water ratio, Hendershot et al., 1993) ‡ Dry Combustion (VarioMAX Cube, Elementar Analysensysteme GmbH, Hanau, Germany) 1 Indicates site is tile drained ∞ Grand mean and SD, (n=12 sites*4 replicates-6 outliers=42). There were 6 data points identified as outliers.

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2.2.2. Soil sampling and analysis

At each of the field sites, one composite soil sample was taken at a depth of 0 to 30 cm

from the zero N plots five days before or after planting. A subsample was kept moist and

stored at 4oC until analysis. On the remaining soil, soil moisture content was determined

by drying soil at 105 oC for 24 hours and the remaining was air-dried and sieved (<2mm)

before laboratory analysis. On air-dried soils, soil pH was determined in a 1:2 soil:

deionized water suspension (Hendershot et al., 1993). Particle size analysis was

determined using the pipette method following organic matter removal (Gee and Bauder,

1986). Total soil C and N was measured with the dry combustion method using a CNS

analyzer (VarioMAX cube, Elementar Analysensysteme GmbH, Hanau, Germany).

2.2.3 Laboratory-based indicators for predicting crop N availability

Soil N mineralization parameters

A modified method of the long-term aerobic incubation (Curtin and Campbell, 2008) was

used to measure potentially mineralizable N (N0) and mineralizable N pools (Pool I, Pool

II and Pool III). In brief, 30g of soil were mixed with an equal amount of acid-washed

Ottawa sand for coarse-textured soils and with twice the amount of sand for fine-textured

soils and packed into 5 cm diameter plastic Buchner funnels. The soil and sand mixture

was then re-wetted to 55% water filled pore space (WFPS) by adding 175 mL 0.01M

CaCl2 and applying vacuum. Soils were incubated at 25 oC for 24 weeks. Leachates were

collected at day 2, 4, 7 and 14 after incubation and every 2 weeks for the first 12 weeks

and every 4 weeks thereafter with 150 mL 0.01M CaCl2 followed by 25mL of zero-N

nutrient solution (Curtin and Campbell, 2008). Leachates collected during the incubation

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experiment were analyzed for NH4 and NO3 using the indophenol blue method (Sims et

al., 2005) and an Epoch microplate spectrophotometer (BioTek Instruments Inc.,

Winooski, VT, USA). Three mineralizable N pools were calculated from the results of

the 24-week incubation. Pool I was the cumulative N mineralized in the first 2 weeks

following rewetting of the soil, Pool II was the cumulative amount of N mineralized

between week 2 and 24 and Pool III was the amount of N that was potentially available

but did not mineralize during the 24-week incubation. Pool III is therefore estimated as

the difference between N0 and Pool II. Net N mineralized was also calculated as the sum

of N mineralized throughout the 24 weeks incubation (Pool I + Pool II). In addition,

cumulative N leached at each sampling date between 2 and 24 weeks were fitted to the

first-order kinetic model as follows to determine the potentially mineralizble N (N0):

N = 𝑁 (1 − 𝑒 )

where N0 is the potentially mineralizable N, Nmin is the cumulative N mineralized at time

t, k is the mineralization rate constant. The N mineralized in the first 2-week period was

excluded from curve fitting as it represents an initial flush of N due to rewetting.

Mineralizable N tests

The KCl extractable NH4 and NO3 (KCl-NH4 and KCl-NO3) were extracted from moist

soil using 2 M KCl (1:5 soil to extractant ratio). Concentrations of NH4 and NO3 were

determined colorimetrically as described above. The KCl-NO3 was hereafter referred to

as the PPNT and the soil mineral N at planting is hereafter referred to as SMNp

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(calculated as the sum of KCl-NH4 and KCl-NO3). In addition, composite soil samples

were collected from zero N plots at a depth of 0 to 30 cm at corn harvest and stored at -

20˚C until analysis. The soils were extracted for mineral N (NH4 and NO3) using 2M

KCl. Soil mineral N at harvest was calculated as the sum of KCl-NH4 and KCl-NO3 and

is hereafter referred to as SMNh.

Hot KCl extractable NH4 (Hot KCl-NH4) was determined by heating 3.0 g of dry soil

with 20 mL of 2M KCl to 100oC for 4 hours using a digestion block (Gianello and

Bremner, 1986) followed by analysis of NH4 as described above. The ultraviolet

absorbance of a 0.01M NaHCO3 extract at 205nm (NaHCO3-205) and 260nm (NaHCO3-

260) as described by Fox and Piekielek (1978) and Hong et al. (1990) using an Epoch

microplate spectrophotometer (BioTek Instruments Inc., Winooski, VT, USA). The ISNT

was determined using the method described by Khan et al. (2001). Briefly, 1g of air-dried

soil was mixed with 10mL of 2M NaOH in a mason jar and heated for 5h at 50oC using a

water bath. Released ammonia (NH3) was collected in a boric acid indicator solution

(4%, w/v) and titrated using 0.02N H2SO4 to indicator endpoint. Carbon mineralization

was measured as an indicator of microbial activity (Hopkins, 2006). Briefly, 40g field-

moist soil was incubated at 25oC in a 1L mason jar containing a CO2 trap (10mL 2M

NaOH). Additionally, 10mL deionized water was placed in a vial at the bottom of the jar

to maintain humidity. The CO2 traps were exchanged at day 1 (CO2-1 Day) and day 7

(CO2-Day 7). Nitrogen mineralization following the 7-day incubation (CO2-N min) was

also measured by exacting mineral N using the 2M KCl extraction as described above.

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The water-extractable organic C (WEOC) and N (WEON), hot water-extractable organic

C (Hot-WEOC) and KCl extractable N (WEOM-KCl) was determined sequentially as per

Curtin et al. (2006) and Chantigny et al. (2009). In the first step, 4 g of air-dried soil was

shaken with 20 mL of room temperature deionized water for 60 min. Extracts were then

centrifuged at 4500xg for 20 min and the supernatant was decanted and analyzed for

organic C (WEOC) using an Schimadzu TOC-VCPH (Schimadzu Scientific Instruments,

Columbia, MD, USA). Total water soluble N (WSN) was determined using the persulfate

oxidation method as described by Cabrera and Beare, 1993. The water extractable

organic N (WEON) was calculated by subtracting the water extractable mineral N

(WEMN) from the WSN. Following decanting, 30 mL of deionized water was added to

the soil and the solution was heated to 50oC for 16h using a water bath. Hot water

extracts were then centrifuged as per WEOM, decanted and analyzed for organic C (Hot-

WEOC) as described above. Finally, 2 M KCl was added to the soil, shaken for 60 min,

filtered and analyzed for mineral N (WEOM-KCl).

Particulate organic matter C and N (POMC and POMN) was determined by shaking 25g

field-moist soil overnight in a 5 g L-1 sodium hexametaphosphate solution. Soil was then

passed through a 53-𝜇m sieve (Gregorich and Ellert, 1993). Retained sand and macro-

organic matter were dried and weighed and total C and N concentrations were determined

using a CNS analyzer (VarioMAX cube, Elementar Analysensysteme GmbH, Hanau,

Germany).

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2.2.4 Field-based indicators of corn N availability

Corn plants were harvested at maturity in October 2013. Eight to 10 plants were

randomly harvested within a 16 m2 subplot in each of the zero N rate and optimal N rate

treatments. Corn plants were separated into their kernel, cob and stover portions. Grains

were threshed and weighed, and yields (GY) were adjusted to 15% moisture content. The

stover and grain from each zero N rate treatment was then dried in a drying oven at 60 oC

and a subsample was weighed to determine DM yield. The grain and stover was then

ground (<1mm) for determination of total N concentration by dry combustion using a

CNS analyzer (VarioMAX cube, Elementar Analysensysteme GmbH, Hanau, Germany).

The plant N uptake in zero N plots (PNU0N) was calculated from the grain and stover

tissue N concentrations from zero N rate treatments, corrected for any starter fertilizer N

applied with the seeder at planting. Relative yield (RY) and delta yield (∆Y) were then

calculated as follows:

RY = (

) × 100

∆Y = GY optimal N − GY zero N

The RY was used to determine crop response to N fertilizer addition and used as an

indicator of crop N availability to minimize the variability in soil productivity and

management, and site characteristics across experimental sites (Williams et al., 2007). A

larger value of RY indicates that the field was less responsive to fertilizer addition and

therefore assumed to have higher crop N availability. In contrast, a smaller RY value is

indicative of a more responsive field to N fertilizer addition and therefore lower crop N

availability can be assumed. Finally, the soil N supply was calculated as PNU0N plus

SMNh and was used as an estimate of the N available for plant uptake.

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2.2.5 Statistical Analysis

Statistical analyses were performed using SAS (SAS Institute Inc., 2012). Data was first

tested for normality using the Kolmogorov–Smirnov test. Outliers were identified and

removed from the data set if the data point was ± 3 standard deviations from the mean.

The ward clustering method was performed using PROC CLUSTER and TREE to group

together soils similar in soil texture (clay, silt and sand), chemical properties (pH, TN, TC

and C: N) and site characteristics (growing season rainfall and temperature). The PROC

CORR was used to determine significant correlations between laboratory-based

indicators and RY. Significant correlations (P<0.05) were then evaluated for functionality

by graphing in excel and tested for significance using PROC REG. Regressions were

accepted as significant at P<0.05. The correlation analysis was first done on the whole

data set followed by analysis based the results of the clustering method. Additionally,

PROC CORR was performed between Pool I results and RY to determine the best

incubation time.

2.3.Results

2.3.1 Laboratory-based indicators for predicting corn N availability

Soil N mineralization

The long-term aerobic incubation results showed that the potential for selected soils to

mineralize N (N0) was in the range of 95 to 199 mg kg-1 with an average of 147 mg kg-1

(Table 2.2). The associated k values ranged from 0.022 to 0.048 week-1. The NA

associated with the Ridgetown site was because it did not converge with first order

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kinetics. The Pool I ranged from 16 to 70 mg kg-1, with an average of 42 mg kg-1 and

represented approximately 31% of the net N mineralized. The Pool II was less variable

among sites (56-121 mg kg-1) with an average of 89 mg kg-1. The average net N

mineralized (Pool I + Pool II) was 117 mg N kg-1. The N0 represented 9.8% of the total

soil N and the 3 distinct pools: Pool I, Pool II and Pool III represented on average 2.5, 5.3

and 4.8% of total soil N.

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Table 2.2. Mean values for N mineralization parameters (standard deviation in parenthesis) measured during the long-term aerobic incubation for soils from each experimental site sampled in southwestern Ontario (n=4).

Pool I§ Pool II

Net N Min Pool III N0 k

Site location mg kg-1 week-1 Ilderton 36(10) 99 (4.9) 135(15) 57(18) 155(17) 0.047(0.008)

Strathroy 44(11) 90(7.8) 134(16) 109(37) 199(42) 0.029(0.009)

Hart 31(16) 121(13) 153(28) 77(26) 198(36) 0.048(0.009)

Rutherford 24(3.8) 73(2.0) 97(4.7) 109(50) 181(48) 0.027(0.013)

Moorefield 34(3.0) 59(6.3) 93(7.7) 22(8.2) 81(13) 0.060(0.011)

Mount Hope 29(6.0) 57(4.8) 86(3.0) 44(15) 103(18) 0.035(0.007)

Bornholm 53(4.2) 68(2.6) 121(5.6) 49(9.5) 117(10) 0.041(0.005)

Lucan 26(6.4) 82(6.3) 108(13) 76(25) 161(24) 0.036(0.008)

ERS-OMAFRA 35(4.0) 74(13) 109(11) 140(42) 224(44) 0.022(0.005)

ERS-Lauzon 16(5.4) 56(20) 73(19) 51(40) 95(56) 0.032(0.01)

Woodslee 70(3) 105(7.3) 176(15) 87(45) 193(38) 0.041(0.01)

U of G-Ridgetown

53(13) 71(13) 123(16) NA NA NA

Mean (n=42) # 42 89 117 66 147 0.04

SD (n=42) 21 40 16 43 56 0.01

§Pool I= concentration of N mineralized within the first two weeks of the aerobic incubation; Pool II= N mineralized between 2 and 24 week of the aerobic incubation; Net N Min=Pool I +Pool II; Pool III= N not mineralized during the aerobic incubation but may be potentially available (calculated as the difference between N0 and Pool II); N0= potentially mineraliable nitrogen calculated using N mineralized between weeks 2 and 24 and first order kinetic model; k=mineralization rate constant; NA=not available; SD=standard deviation # Grand mean and SD (n=12 sites*4 replicates-6 outliers=42). There were 6 data points identified as outliers

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Results from the Pool I incubation (leaching at days 0,2,4,7 and14) showed the

cumulative amount of N mineralized at day 14 was the best predictor of RY for both

coarse-textured soils (Cs-T) and medium textured soils (Md-T) (Table 2.3). Although the

amount leached at day 2 was significantly related to RY for Cs-T soils (r=0.34) the

correlation was almost twice as strong at day 14 (r=0.64). In Md-T soils the amount

released at day 4 was significantly correlated to RY (r=0.27) but the correlation was

again substantially stronger at day 14 (r=-0.59).

Table 2.3 Mean cumulative N mineralized on day 2, 4 7 and 14 (Pool I) of the long-term aerobic incubation for each experimental field site (n=4) and the correlation coefficient (r) with RY at each time step for Cs-T (n=21) and Md-T (n=21) soil texture group. Cumulative N Mineralized (mg kg-1) Day 2 Day 4 Day 7 Day 14 Cs-T Ilderton 15 28 32 36 Strathroy 16 27 36 44 Hart 15 28 30 31 Rutherford 19 22 23 24 ERS-OMAFRA 19 25 34 35 ERS-Lauzon 10 14 15 16 Correlation Coefficient (r) RY 0.34** 0.20 0.28* 0.64** Md-T Helmuth 20 27 30 34 Mount Hope 14 25 28 29 Bornholm 22 33 37 53 Lucan 10 20 23 26 Woodslee 22 42 56 70 UofG-Ridgetown

24 41 47 53

Correlation Coefficient (r) RY <0.10 -0.27* -0.23* -0.59**

*= P<0.05 and **=P<0.01

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Mineralizable N tests

Methods for predicting crop N availability from N mineralization are summarized in

Table 2.4. The PPNT ranged from 3.13 to 13.5 mg kg-1 and represented 70% of the

SMNp. The SMNp across sites ranged between 5.56 and 12.8 mg kg-1 with an average of

9.9 mg kg-1 and constituted from 15.8% (Strathroy) to 30% (Mount Hope) of the soil N

supply. The Hot-KCl-NH4 ranged between 8.86 and 26.1 mg kg-1 and extracted 1.6 to 10

times more NH4 than the 2M KCl extraction. The N mineralized over a 7-day incubation

period (CO2-Min N) was a magnitude of 1.2 to 16 times lower than the amount released

over the 14-day incubation with periodic leaching events (Pool I). The CO2 evolved over

a 7-day period was not reported, as concentrations were too small to be measured using

manual titration resulting in no difference being observed between soils.

The ISNT extracted the most organic N (215-436 mg N kg-1) followed by POMN (4.74-

177 mg N kg-1) and WEON (24-82 mg N kg-1). The WEOC was between 163 to 408 mg

kg-1 and extracted 50% more C than the hot-WEOC (61-183 mg kg-1). The WEOC and

WEON fractions represented 1.3% and 2.1% of the total C and total N, respectively and

the POMC and POMN fractions represented 9% and 4.3% of the total C and total N,

respectively. The WEOC: N values ranged from 3.1 to 11 and were between 0.8 and 6.8

times lower than the whole soil C: N and the POMC: N ranged from 14.7 to 147 and

were between 0.9 and 3.4 times higher than the whole soil C: N. The POMC was the

most variable chemical test observed in this study (123-5657 mg kg-1)

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Table 2.4. Mean values for mineralizable N tests (standard deviation in parenthesis) measured in soils from 12 experimental sites (n=4).

Continued…

Mineralizable N tests SMNp§

KCl- NH4

PPNT

NaHCO3- 205

NaHCO3- 260

Hot-KCl- NH4

CaCl2-N Extractable N

CO2- MinN ISNT

Site Location mg kg-1 mg kg-1 Ilderton 9.80

(1.5) 3.80

(0.40) 6.10 (1.2)

0.41 (0.07)

0.10 (0.05)

20.0 (6)

25.6 (1.8)

17.6 (7.2)

218 (121)

Strathroy 6.98 (1.8)

3.80 (1.2)

3.13 (0.59)

0.37 (0.04)

0.13 (0.04)

8.86 (2.7)

16.9 (2.18)

11.2 (1.3)

258 (60)

Hart 8.16 (2.3)

3.17 (1.8)

4.98 (0.61)

0.51 (0.02)

0.15 (0.01)

18.9 (5.2)

24.8 (3.0)

14.3 (3.8)

360 (47)

Rutherford 9.12 (2.2)

4.80 (1.6)

4.30 (0.79)

0.40 (0.05)

0.07 (0.01)

12.5 (2.7)

18.2 (4.0)

10.5 (2.7)

273 (11)

Moorefield 12.2 (4.3)

3.60 (2.3)

8.60 (2.1)

0.51 (0.05)

0.14 (0.01)

14.2 (4.5)

26.0 (5.8)

14.7 (2.8)

329 (83)

Mount Hope 15.7 (7.4)

2.19 (0.64)

13.5 (6.9)

0.56 (0.09)

0.12 (0.03)

16.0 (6.4)

8.17 (0.36)

25.1 (10.9)

351 (152)

Bornholm 11.0 (1.5)

2.87 (1.6)

8.10 (0.49)

0.54 (0.05)

0.15 (0.02)

12.5 (1.7)

20.4 (2.0)

16.0 (3.4)

372 (42)

Lucan 7.67 (0.95)

2.75 (0.50)

4.90 (0.53)

0.49 (0.04)

0.18 (0.01)

10.9 (3.8)

2.83 (0.06)

13.9 (5.6)

255 (55)

ERS-OMAFRA 10.1 (1.2)

1.80 (0.98)

8.20 (1.3)

0.47 (0.04)

0.13 (0.02)

16.6 (3.8)

22.0 (2.5)

11.3 (3.5)

317 (40)

ERS-Lauzon 5.56 (0.43)

0.88 (0.16)

4.68 (0.53)

0.34 (0.05)

0.12 (0.01)

11.5 (6.0)

14.8 (3.6)

10.3 (1.8)

215 (36)

Woodslee 12.8 (1.2)

5.13 (1.1)

7.60 (1.3)

0.52 0.04)

0.20 (0.02)

26.1 (3.0)

26.1 (3.0)

20.6 (7.8)

374 (30)

U of G-Ridgetown

9.40 (3.0)

0.93 (0.17)

8.40 (2.9)

0.49 (0.06)

0.16 (0.04)

10.3 (2.2)

7.49 (3.5)

4.50 (3.3)

437 (21)

Mean (n=42)# 9.88 2.99 6.89 0.47 0.14 16.1 17.6 14.6 317 SD (n=42) 2.3 1.00 1.60 0.07 0.04 6.63 7.64 5.40 67.7

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Table 2.4. Continued

§SMNp= soil mineral N at 0-30cm soil depth prior to planting; KCl-NH4= extractable NH4-N with 2M KCl at 0-30cm depth prior to planting; PPNT= extractable NO3-N with 2M KCl at 0-30cm soil depth prior to planting; NaHCO3-205= ultraviolet absorbance of 0.01M NaHCO3 extract at 205nm; NaHCO3-260=unltraviolet absorbance of 0.01M NaHCO3 extract at 260nm; Hot KCl-NH4= extractable NH4 with 2M KCl at 100oC for 4 hours; CaCl2 = soil mineral extracted in 0.01M CaCl2; CO2-Mineral N= mineral nitrogen extracted with 2M KCl following 7 day incubation; ISNT=Illinois Soil N Test for amino-sugar-N; WEOM-C= water-extractable organic carbon; WEOM-N=water extractable organic nitrogen; WEOM-C:M= water extractable organic carbon to nitrogen ratio; Hot-WEOM-C: hot water extractable organic carbon; WEOM-KCl= mineral N extracted using 2MKCl following cold and hot water extraction in sequence; POM-N= particulate organic matter nitrogen; POM-C=particulate organic matter carbon; POM-C:N= particulate organic matter carbon to nitrogen ratio; SD=standard deviation # Grand mean and SD. (n=12 sites*4 replicates-6 outliers=42). There were 6 data points identified as outliers.

Mineralizable N tests

WEOC WEON WEMN WSN WEOC: N Hot- WEOC

WEOM- KCl POMN POMC POMC: N

Site Location mg kg-1 mg kg-1 Ilderton 204

(8.5) 25.8 (9.5)

11.8 (5.5)

37.5 (6.2)

8.9 (1.7)

117 (0.4)

16.17 (1.6)

12.7 (8.2)

332 (261)

24.2 (5.5)

Strathroy 188 (36)

23.9 (6.1)

3.92 (0.9)

27.8 (5.8)

8.4 (1.4)

109 (9.3)

7.04 (0.75)

103 (6.8)

1774 (304)

17.2 (1.9)

Hart 246 (4.1)

28.4 (6.2)

9.34 (2.0)

37.7 (5.2)

9.0 (0.91)

118 (11)

19.2 (4.3)

142 (45)

2351 (600)

17.1 (4.4)

Rutherford 185 (4.9)

26.6 (2.1)

8.33 (1.0)

35.0 (1.5)

7.0 (0.14)

93 (7.4)

11.1 (0.97)

111 (35)

1975 (400)

18.4 (4.1)

Moorefield 188 (5.2)

31.6 (3.4)

10.5 (2.5)

42.2 (3.8)

6.0 (0.41)

79 (5.2)

11.5 (3.8)

11.6 (4.6)

319.0 (144)

27.6 (4.4)

Mount Hope 252 (8.6)

33.0 (2.9)

13.8 (5.1)

46.7 (6.0)

7.7 (0.39)

108 (2.0)

11.1 (5.7)

110 (50)

2625 (57)

37.4 (10)

Bornholm 312 (7.1)

32.5 (2.5)

8.82 (2.1)

41.3 (3.2)

9.8 (0.51)

129 (7.0)

19.0 (12)

8.42 (3.0)

191 (73)

22.7 (2.8)

Lucan 343 (8.6)

32.4 (2.9)

5.76 (0.8)

38.2 (3.3)

11 (0.75)

137 (5.9)

9.6 (3.8)

4.74 (1.5)

122.7 (45)

25.6 (1.8)

ERS-OMAFRA 192 (3.6)

26.6 (1.5)

8.85 (1.4)

28.8 (14)

7.3 (0.24)

92 (0.13)

14.1 (2.2)

60.2 (46)

2488 (2378)

33.2 (14)

ERS-Lauzon 163 (8.3)

27.3 (1.0)

20.7 (18)

34.4 (4)

5.7 (0.27)

63 (1.6)

6.4 (2.7)

64.6 (53)

5657 (2653)

147 (115)

Woodslee 408 (18)

36.6 (4.9)

5.27 (0.27)

41.9 (4.7)

11 (0.60)

95 (0.24)

15.2 (3.5)

177 (69)

2596 (1126)

14.7 (0.85))

U of G-Ridgetown

238 (22)

82.4 (21)

7.2 (2.4)

89.6 (21)

3.1 (0.66)

183 (3.7)

9.08 (6.5)

146 (18)

3057 (472)

21.0 (2.7)

Mean# (n=42) 243 33.9 9.52 41.8 4.0 58.8 13.4 73.2 1904 34.6 SD (n=42) 52.8 5.3 3.5 6.5 1.33 19.6 5.2 55.5 1597 34.4

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2.3.2 Field-based indicators of corn N availability

Dry matter yield and GY ranged between 11.48- 23.40 and 4.8-10.12 Mg ha-1,

respectively and ∆Y and RY showed that a wide variation in crop response to N fertilizer

addition was observed. Strathroy and Moorefield sites exhibited less response to fertilizer

addition (∆Y=1.8 and 2.6 Mg ha-1, respectively) than Ridgetown and Lauzon sites where

yields increased by 7.8 and 8.9 Mg ha-1, respectively. Plant N uptake from the zero N

plots ranged from 47.52 to 131.5 kg N ha-1 (Table 2.5). The soil N supply for all sites

ranged from 68 to 189 kg N ha-1. A large portion (17-46%) of the soil N supply was

remaining in the soil at harvest (SMNh), but these values were highly variable across

sites. The Lucan and Mount Hope sites showed substantially more SMNh (74 and 63.1

kg N ha-1, respectively) than the Lauzon and Strathroy sites (26.5 and 27.6 kg N ha-1,

respectively).

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Table 2.5. Mean values for field-based indicators of crop N availability (standard deviation in parenthesis) measured at 12 experimental sites in southwestern Ontario (n=4).

§PNU0N=Plant N uptake in zero N treatments; SMNh= Soil mineral N at harvest; Soil N Supply=PNU0N + SMNh; DM= dry matter yield; GY=grain yield; ∆Y=(GY optimal N-GY zero N); RY=[(GY zero N/GY optimal N) x100]; SD=standard deviation. # Grand mean and SD

PNU0N§ SMNh

Soil N Supply DM

GY ∆Y RY

kg N ha-1 Mg ha-1 %

Ilderton 66.9(12) 55.7(4.8) 123(12) 23.8(4.2) 6.93(1.9) 5.0(1.1) 61.9(15) Strathroy 132(18) 27.6(4.5) 159(20) 27.1(2.2) 10.1(1.1) 1.8(1.1) 93.9(11)

Hart 97.7(24) 46.9(11) 145(22) 30.2(3.3) 7.04(0.5) 4.8(1.1) 55.5(5.0) Rutherford 116(29) 40.0(2.1) 156(29) 31.3(6.3) 7.07(0.1) 4.8(0.5) 55.5(6.9) Moorefield 126(13) 44.4(4.8) 170(14) 27.3(3.2) 6.93(0.5) 2.6(1.0) 70.1(7)

Mount Hope 127(32) 63.1(15) 189(36) 33.5(6.0) 6.54(0.9) 3.8(0.7) 64.1(3.5) Bornholm 94.0(14) 61.3(9.5) 156(17) 19.4(2.0) 6.93(0.9) 3.8(0.6) 60.4(7.2)

Lucan 113(24) 74.0(7.6) 166(22) 23.4(2.8) 7.57(1.4) 3.3(1.0) 65.9(6.2) ERS-OMAFRA 87.8(20) 52.2(11) 140(21) 21.3(1.8) 7.00(0.9) 3.1(0.3) 63.7(2.2)

ERS-Lauzon 47.5(15) 26.5(20) 74.0(15) 14.3(3.3) 4.33(1.1) 8.9(1.2) 39.2(3) Woodslee 68.4(10) - 68.4(10) 11.5(2.2) 4.80(1.1) 4.4(1.4) 51.4(15) U of G-

Ridgetown 73.7(31) 63.2(9.5) 137(29) 13.9(5.7) 5.74(2.1) 7.8(1.7) 45.9(9.0)

Mean# (n=42) 97.3 48.5 140 24.0 6.70 4.30 59.3 SD (n=42) 32.0 13.0 33.2 6.23 1.67 2.10 10.4

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2.3.4 Relationships between laboratory indicators and RY

Results from the correlation analysis done between laboratory indicators and RY are

presented in Table 2.6. A significant correlation was observed between PNU0N and DY

(Figure 2.2, r=0.72, P<0.001). The data set was successfully grouped based on clay

content to form two groups: the Coarse Textured (Cs-T) soil group (clay ≤ 240 g kg-1,

n=6) and the Medium Textured (Md-T) soil group (clay> 240 g kg-1, n=6). The PPNT

showed no significant correlation with RY for the whole data set (r=-0.13; Figure 2.3)

and when separated based on soil texture (Table 2.6). Pool I was the only parameter to

show a significant functional relationship with RY but only when the data set was

separated based on clay content (Figure 2.4). In Cs-T soils, Pool I showed a significant

positive linear relationship with RY (R² = 0.55, P<0.001, n=21) and a negative

relationship in Md-T soils (R² = 0.35, P=0.004, n=21) (Figure 2.4). Other parameters that

had significant correlations with RY included WEON, WEOC: N, POMC and POMC: N,

however upon further assessment showed no functional relationship (refer to Appendix).

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Table 2.6. Correlation coefficients (r) between laboratory indicators for predicting crop N availability and relative yield (RY) for whole data set (n=42), Cs-T soils (clay ≤ 240 g kg-1, n=21) and Md-T soils (clay>240 g kg-1, n=21).

*=P<0.05; **=P<0.01.

Indicator RY Whole

DS Cs-T Md-T Mineralizable N parameters Pool I 0.12 0.64** -0.59** Pool II 0.17 0.34 -0.31 Net N Min -0.21 0.51* 0.50* N0 0.30 0.44 -0.14 Pool III 0.27 0.17 0.14 k 0.10 0.13 0.42 Mineralizable N tests PPNT -0.13 0.07 -0.02 KCl-NH4 0.06 0.20 0.15 SMNp -0.10 0.16 0.04 NaHCO3-205 0.35* 0.33 0.34 NaHCO3-260 0.05 0.31 -0.24 Hot KCl-NH4 0.009 -0.06 -0.27 CaCl2 –N 0.06 0.22 -0.17 CO2-Nmin 0.30 0.06 0.04 ISNT -0.13 0.40 -0.18 WEOC 0.08 0.18 -0.24 WEON 0.18 -0.54** -0.41* WEMN -0.02 -0.30 0.33 WSN 0.01 -0.23 -0.36 WEOC: N 0.41* 0.67** 0.12 Hot WEOC 0.19 0.43 -0.36 WEOM-KCl 0.12 0.13 0.17 POM-N -0.29 0.07 -0.40 POM-C -0.54** -0.54** -0.51* POM-C: N -0.42** -0.54** 0.45

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Figure 2.2 The relationship between PNU0N and DY in zero N plots for experimental corn sites in Ontario.

r = 0.72; P<0.05, n=48

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

0 50 100 150 200

DY

(Mg

ha-1

)

PNU0N (kg ha-1)

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Figure 2.3. The relationship between PPNT and RY for all experimental sites in Ontario in 2013.

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

0 5 10 15 20 25

RY (%

)

PPNT (mg kg-1)

r = -0.13, P>0.05, n=42

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Figure 2.4 Relationship between Pool I and RY for (a) the whole data set, (b) Cs-T soils (clay ≤ 240 g kg-1), and (c) Md-T soils (clay > 240 g kg-1); *=data point not included in correlation and regression analysis.

0

20

40

60

80

100

0 20 40 60 80 100

RY (%

)

Pool I (mg kg-1)

a

y = 0.77x + 31R² = 0.55, P<0.001, n=21

0

20

40

60

80

100

0 20 40 60 80 100

RY (%

)

Pool I (mg kg-1)

*b

y = -0.36 + 76R² = 0.35, P<0.01, n=21

0

20

40

60

80

100

0 20 40 60 80 100

RY (%

)

Pool I (mg kg-1)

c

r = 0.12, P>0.05, n=42

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As the soil N supply consists of pre-plant soil mineral N and mineralizable N and in

attempt to improve the relationship between Pool I and RY, SMNp was included with

Pool I. Results from regression analysis showed the relationship improved in Cs-T soils

from R2=0.55 to 0.63 (Figure 2.5).

Figure 2.5. Relationship between Pool I + SMNp in Cs-T soils and RY. *=data point not included in correlation and regression analysis.

y = 0.78x + 23.903R² = 0.63, P<0.001, n=21

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70

RY (%

)

Pool I + SMNp (mg kg-1)

*

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2.4 Discussion

2.4.1 Laboratory indicators for predicting corn N availability

Soil N mineralization

Selected Ontario soils exhibited a wide range of N supplying potential which is consistent

with the wide distribution of site characteristics, especially pH. The optimum pH for

microbes is between 6-7 (Hartel, 2005). The majority of our sites had a pH between 7 and

8. Strathroy had a pH of 6.6, which may explain its high N mineralizaion potential. The

Lauzon site on the other hand had a pH of 8.5 and may explain its low mineralization

potential and crop yield (Table 2.1, Table 2.5).

The cumulative N mineralized during the incubation were higher than the values reported

for soils taken from 17 experimental field sites in New Brunswick, Quebec, Manitoba

and Saskatchewan, Canada and Maine USA under various field crops (54-197 mg kg-1;

Sharifi et al., 2007a), and closer to the values reported for 19 arable soils in Ontario,

British Columbia, Quebec and New Brunswick (18-174 mg kg-1; Nyiraneza et al., 2012).

The Pool I values were similar to those measured by Nyiraneza et al. (2012; 3-61 mg kg-

1) across Canada and larger than the values reported by Sharifi et al., (2007a,b; 4.3-41,

20-37 mg kg-1) for annual crops in eastern and western Canada and Maine, USA. The

higher values in this study may be due to the difference in leaching method (buchner

funnels vs. leaching tubes) and 0.01M CaCl2 volume (175 vs. 125 mL; Sharifi et al.,

2007a; Nyiraneza et al., 2012).

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Furthermore, the potential of a soil to supply N depends on the total N content (Ros et al.,

2015). The greater the total N, the higher the capacity of a soil to supply N. A similar

portion of total N as Pool I and II was mineralized in study compared to Sharifi et al.

(2007a) (Pool I=2.25% and Pool II=5.25%) however the higher total C and total N in this

study (20.7 and 1.7 g kg-1) compared to theirs (17.5 and 1.3 g kg-1) may explain the larger

amount of mineralizable N. Sharifi et al. (2007a) and Nyiraneza et al. (2012) also found

that Pool I represented a similar portion of the net N mineralized (23 and 27%)

supporting the developing theory that short term-incubations may be a more realistic

representation of N mineralized in a growing season than the long-term aerobic

incubation (Standford and Smith, 1972; Jalil et al., 1996; Schomberg et al., 2009; Ros et

al., 2011).

Mineralizable N tests

The SMNp in this study contributed a similar portion to the soil N supply as observed for

corn in Eastern Ontario (16-24%, Wu et al., 2008; 19-27%, and Ma et al., 2005) and for

corn in Quebec in unfertilized plots (25%, Nyiraneza et al.,2009). This suggests that a

large portion of the crop available N (approx. 70% of the soil N supply) remains to

originate from the mineralization of SON in Ontario soils.

The concentration of Hot-KCl-NH4 was within the range found in arable soils (Sharifi et

al., 2007, Nyiraneza et al., 2012). The higher concentrations of Hot-KCl-NH4 compared

with 2M KCl-NH4 can be explained by the high capacity of these soils to supply N (Jalil

et al., 1996; Sharifi et al., 2007a). The ISNT method extracted the largest fraction of

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organic N in this study with values similar to the average reported for Canadian soils

(190 mg kg-1; Nyiraneza et al., 2012), well-drained soils of North Carolina (150 mg kg-1,

Williams, 2007) and from soils taken from 96 N rate studies across the Midwest US

(Laboski et al., 2008). The greater of amount N extracted in the ISNT compared to

WEOM or POM is directly related to the nature of the extraction as ISNT measures total

hydrolysable N, hydrolysable NH4+ and hydrolysable amino acid and amino sugar N

present within the soils (Mulvaney et al., 2001).

The WEON values were larger than those reported for soils collected in Western Canada

receiving pea, faba bean or wheat residues (3.9-6.4 mg kg-1, St. Luce et al., 2014), but

similar to values reported for non-amended soils under a corn monoculture (Gregorich et

al., 2003. The WEOC concentrations were similar to those reported for maize cropped

soils in Ontario (280-570 mg C kg-1; Gregorich et al., 2003), however the WEOC: N was

lower (Gregorich et al., 2003 (13) Curtin et al., 2006 (10.4-23.9); Haney et al., 2012 (20))

and WEON proportion of TN (2.5%) was higher compared to the literature (0.75-0.9%,

Curtin et al., 2006). The high proportion of total N as WEON indicates that these soils are

high in soluble N compounds, a biologically available form of organic N (Herbert and

Bertsch, 1995), and the low C: N ratio of the WEOM fraction could be the result of long-

term N fertilization leading to a larger soluble N pool and stimulation of the microbial

community resulting in increased mineralization of SON (McDowell, 2003).

The POMN values were lower than those reported for Western Canada (174-643 mg kg-1;

St. Luce et al., 2014) in soils receiving legume and non-legume crop residues and for

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potato trials in Eastern Canada and US (POMC=2050 mg kg-1, POMN=101 mg N kg-1;

Sharifi et al., 2007). The proportion of POMN of total N was lower in this study (4.3%)

compared to the average reported in the literature (18%; Gregorich et al. 2006), which is

indicative of a management system not receiving large inputs from organic sources

(Wander, 2004). The POMC: N (34) was larger than the whole soil C: N (13) which is

typically seen due to the addition of high C: N residues (corn, wheat and soybean stalks)

in conventional systems (St.Luce et al., 2011). These results merit further investigation

into the labile fractions of organic N (WEOM and POM) for soils under conventional

management in Ontario soils is required, as both of these fractions are known to be

readily available substrates for microbes (Wander, 2004).

2.4.2 Field-based indicators of corn N availability

The soil N supply was highly variable across southwestern Ontario and a significant

portion, between 28 and 74 kg N ha-1, was remaining as mineral N in the soil at harvest.

This is consistent with De Jong et al. (2009) who found that for agricultural land in

Ontario between 1981 and 2006, on average 57 kg N ha-1 was remaining in the soil as

residual soil NO3 (RSN) at harvest. This high RSN at harvest provides evidence that there

is asynchrony between soil N supply and crop N demand resulting in the potential of

significant N losses over the fall and spring months (Power et al., 1998; Dinnes at al.,

2002). Management practices such as inter-seeding cover crops can synchronize N

mineralization to crop N uptake and reduce N losses following harvest (Loecke et al.,

2012; Rasouli et al. 2013).

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2.4.3 Relationships between laboratory indicators and RY

The PPNT showed no relationship with RY for the whole data set which is in agreement

with Belanger et al. (2001) who reported NO3 alone to be a poor predictor of RY for a

potato-forage-grain rotation in Atlantic Canada (r=0.37-0.55) and Nyiraneza et al. (2009)

who determined it was not a consistent predictor of the most economic rate of N for corn

in Quebec (r=-0.24, P>0.05 in 2007; r=-0.46, P<0.05 in 2008). The poor relationship

observed between NO3 and RY can be explained by the temporal and spatial variability

across landscapes arising from early season soil temperature and moisture (Nyiraneza et

al., 2009) soil texture (Cambouris et al., 2005) and cropping history (Andraski et al.,

2000).

Pool I had a significant positive relationship with RY in Cs-T soils while in Md-T soils,

Pool I had a significant negative relationship with RY. It is hypothesized that this lower

N availability in the field for Md-T soils, indicated by the inverse relationship, can be

explained by two factors: soil clay content and soil pre-treatment. Sites with the highest

clay content (Woodslee- 406 g kg-1 and U of G-Ridgetown- 440 g kg-1) had the lowest

RY (51 and 45%, respectively) but relatively high net N mineralization (176 and 123 mg

kg-1). This may be a result of slower actual release of SON in the field from aggregate

formation and physical protection from clay particles. (Angers et al., 1997; Yoo and

Wander, 2006; Kölbl et al., 2006; Chivenge et al., 2011; Nyiraneza et al., 2012). Kölbl

and Kögel-Knabner (2004) attribute this decrease in mineralization due to the

contribution of partially decomposed plant material to macro-aggregate formation in soils

with higher clay content.

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Soil pre-treatment in this study consisted of air-drying, crushing and sieving (2mm) soils

prior to the incubation. Beare et al. (1994) found that crushing macro-aggregates in a

sandy clay loam increased C and N mineralization in the laboratory, compared to cores

that were left intact. This effect may be more prominent in clay soils as clay particles

have been shown to physically protect SOM through the formation of macro-aggregates.

These results indicate that determination of this labile pool of organic N may be more

informative in sandy rather than clay soils as a large proportion (50-75%) of SOM may

be stabilized by clay particles (Christensen, 2001).

Pool I was the best indicator of N availability for both coarse and medium textured soils.

Pool I was more related to RY (r=0.12-0.64) than Pool II (r=-0.31-0.34) and N0 (r=-0.14-

0.44) in this study. This is consistent with Villar et al. (2014), who found Pool I was more

strongly correlated to apparent mineralization from elongation to harvest in wheat

(r=0.53, P<0.05) than with Pool II (r=0.40) and N0 (r=0.32) in the humid Mediterranean

climate of Northern Spain. Nyiraneza et al. (2012) also found a stronger a correlation

between soil N supply and Pool I (r=0.41, P<0.01) than with Pool II (r=0.28, P<0.05) in

soils collected at depth of 0-15cm from cornfields across Canada and incubated at 25oC

for 24 weeks.

The addition of SMNp to Pool I explained an extra 10% of the variability in RY for CT

soils, but not MT soils. This indicator of N availability has been proposed for potato

production in Eastern Canada and Maine, USA (Sharifi et al., 2007). Pool I in

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conjunction with mineral N content at sowing has also showed a strong correlation to

wheat straw yield (r=0.57, P<0.05; Villar et al., 2014) in the humid Mediterranean

climate of northern Spain and recent research indicates that more labile pools (SMN and

Pool I) are depleted throughout the growing season and can contribute up to 72% plant N

uptake (Dessureault-Rompré et al., 2013).

Compared with the whole data set, grouping soils based on soil texture revealed

relationships dependent on clay content. These results are consistent with other work that

has found clay content can explain a substantial proportion of the variation in soil N

mineralization (Nyrianeza et al., 2012; Dessureault-Rompré et al., 2010, Ros et al., 2011;

Villar et al., 2014).

2.5. Conclusion

In conclusion, this study indicated that Ontario soils have a high potential to supply N,

N0=147 mg kg-1. Laboratory indicators of mineralizable N were highly variable across

sites and the SMNp contributed between 15 to 30% of the soil N supply throughout the

growing season indicating that a large portion of the soil N supply originates from

mineralization of SON in humid temperate climates. Field indicators of crop N

availability indicated that management practices should be tailored to reduce residual N

at harvest. The current PPNT was a poor predictor of field based indicators of crop N

availability and Pool I, the cumulative amount of N released in a 2-week aerobic

incubation at 25 oC, was a more robust predictor of crop N availability (RY). Grouping

soils based on soil texture revealed relationships dependent on clay content indicating

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that this parameter should be taken into account when predicting N availability under

field conditions. Pool I in coarse textured soils had a stronger relationship with crop N

availability indicators. The relationship between Pool I and crop N availability indicators

also improved with the addition of SMNp . Overall, this study demonstrated the

importance of a readily mineralizable N pool when predicting N availability to corn over

the growing season in southwestern Ontario.

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Chapter 3. Assessing the ability of laboratory-based indicators of mineralizable N to predict fertilizer N recommendations for corn in southwestern Ontario

3.0 Abstract

Mineralizable nitrogen (N) is an important component of soil N supply with potential to

improve N fertilizer recommendations for grain corn in southwestern Ontario. However,

a robust indicator of mineralizable N has not been developed as a soil test for N fertilizer

recommendations in this region. The objective of this study was to evaluate readily

mineralizable N (Pool I- N mineralized in 2 wk), water soluble N (WSN) and particulate

organic matter N and C (POMN-C) as potential soil N tests for corn in southwestern

Ontario. The soil test calibration method was used to estimate fertilizer N

recommendations based on maximum economic rate of N (MERN) and nitrogen rate at

95% maximum yield (MYRN). Corn N response trials were established at 13 field sites

across southwestern Ontario in 2013 and 2014 and soil samples were collected (0-30-cm

depth) before planting. The pre-plant nitrate test (PPNT) and WSN were significantly

correlated with relative yield, MERN and MYRN and used for N fertilizer

recommendations. The minimum MERN and MYRN was 72 kg N ha-1. When PPNT

concentrations were between 1 and 18 mg kg-1 N fertilizer recommendations could be

successfully calculated using the equation MERN=-5.16 (PPNT)+203 (R2 =0.47) and

MYRN=-4.72(PPNT)+167 (R2=0.56). When WSN concentrations were between 1 and 70

mg kg-1 N fertilizer recommendations could be successfully calculated using the

equations MERN =-2.02(WSN)+250 (R2=0.60) and MYRN=-1.65(WSN)+197 (R2=0.48).

Further research is required test the validity and suitability for each of the proposed linear

models over across years and sites.

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3.1 Introduction

Nitrogen (N) fertilizer recommendations for corn (Zea Mays) at planting in Ontario are

based on the pre-plant nitrate (NO3) test (PPNT) or expected yield with the consideration

soil texture, previous crop, and market prices for corn and N fertilizer. The PPNT for

Ontario was introduced in 1992 and general fertilizer N recommendations for corn were

last updated in 2006. The major downfall to the PPNT is the lack of inclusion of the

mineralizable soil N, a significant portion of the soil N supply for corn in humid

temperate climates (Zebarth et al., 2009; Wu et al., 2008; Whalen et al., 2013). Soil

mineralizable N varies among fields and years and more accurate recommendations are

required that capture this variation and reduce over or under fertilization of N at the

expense of the producer and the environment.

Recent developments for predicting the contribution of mineralizable soil N to corn have

focused on measuring readily mineralizable pools of N such as Pool I (Sharifi et al.,

2007), water extractable carbon (C) and N (WEOC and WEON; Chantigny et al., 2008)

and particulate organic matter C and N (POMC and POMN; St. Luce et al., 2014). The

potential for use of these tests for optimizing fertilizer N recommendations have not been

fully explored for grain in Ontario.

The soil N supply in humid temperate climates includes carryover N from the previous

growing season plus the amount of N that will mineralize over the growing season from

organic sources (Zebarth et al., 2009). Soil N mineralization under field conditions is

difficult to predict due to the dynamic nature of soil moisture and temperature, the

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primary controls on mineralization. Potentially soil mineralizable N parameters in the

laboratory can be measured using the long-term aerobic incubation (Standford and Smith,

1972). This method involves incubation of a soil and sand mixture at optimal moisture

and temperature conditions for mineralization for 20+ weeks with periodic leaching

events. This method is time consuming and laborious and does not necessarily reflect the

amount of N available over one growing season. A short-term incubation (Pool I) is a

common practice derives from the long-term aerobic incubation (Stanford and Smith,

1972). Pool I is the amount of N released in the first two weeks of the incubation and is

known as a flush of N from rewetting of the soil (Sharifi et al., 2007). In arable soils,

Pool I can represent between 7 and 45% of the total N mineralized during the long-term

incubation (Sharifi et al., 2007; Dessureault-Rompré et al., 2010 and 2011; Nyrianeza et

al., 2012; Villar et al., 2014) and has been significantly correlated with the soil N supply

(r=0.41) for grain corn in Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia and Atlantic Canada

(Nyiraneza et al., 2012).

The WEOC and WEON have also shown promise as indicators of potentially available N

(Chantigny, 2003). This soluble portion of soil organic matter (SOM) is an important

substrate for microorganisms and its decomposition into plant available N is dependent

on the biochemical transformation performed by the microbial biomass (Stevenson, 1994;

Haynes, 2000; Chantigny, 2003; Gregorich et al., 2003). The organic N in this pool

represents on average 0.75% of the total soil N and it is hypothesized that this pool is

composed of a complex mixture of molecules that are a direct reflection of the

composition of the SOM (Chantigny, 2003; Haney et al., 2012). Biodegradability studies

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have shown that 60% is biodegradable over the course of 40 days; however, this is

dependent on the type of amendment added to the soil (Gregorich et al., 2003). The C: N

ratio of this fraction is also an important indicator of N availability (Haney et al., 2012).

This labile pool of organic N has been suggested as an early indicator of the effects of

soil management and cropping systems on SOM quality (Gregorich et al., 1994; Haynes

and Beare, 1996) and therefore can provide useful information on the availability of soil

N to the growing field crop.

Particulate organic matter C and N is composed of partially decomposed plant residues

and organic amendments, a transient pool between fresh and humified organic matter

(Gregorich and Janzen, 1996) and the POMN can represent up to 18% of total soil N

(St.Luce et al., 2011). The size and decomposition rate of the POM is directly influenced

by soil texture and management practices, and is the most responsive of the labile organic

matter fractions to management changes (Biederbeck et al., 1998; Franzleubbers et al.,

2000; Wander, 2004; Spargo et al., 2011). In Western Canada, POMN successfully

predicted the canola yield and N uptake (R2=0.56 and 0.69) and in Maryland, USA, a

strong correlation between corn grain yield and N uptake (r=0.72 and 0.63) was

observed. The POM fraction is a promising indicator of N availability to corn as it can

detect management changes and actively contributes to the plant available pool of N

(St.Luce et al., 2014).

For the 2013 growing season, I concluded that the PPNT was not a good indicator of

plant available N and labile pools of soil N have a significant relationship with field-

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based indices of soil N supply and have potential to be used for fertilizer N

recommendations in grain corn. In this chapter corn N response trials were conducted at

various field sites across Ontario. The interpretation and fertilizer N recommendation

tables were developed for selected N tests. Calibration studies provide meaning of the

soil test and allow the establishment of soil test categories to calculate fertilizer

recommendations (Dahnke and Olson, 1990). I hypothesize that readily mineralizable

pools of N can be used to predict crop N availability for corn in southwestern Ontario.

The objectives of this study are to evaluate the ability of mineral N at planting (including

the PPNT), Pool I, WEOM, and POM to i) correlate with grain corn N response

measurements and ii) enable calibration of fertilizer N with maximum economic rate of N

(MERN) and nitrogen rate at 95% maximum yield (MYRN) corn across Ontario. The

mineral N was chosen as it is the most commonly used indicator of plant available N in

Ontario but can vary considerably from year to year. Pool I was chosen because it

showed a promising relationship with relative yield in chapter 2. Finally, WEOM and

POM were chosen as they are becoming recognized as important sources of substrates for

N mineralization in agricultural soils.

3.2 Materials and methods

3.2.1 Field site description and plot setup

Seven sites were selected for establishment of corn N response trials in 2014 across

southwestern Ontario. These sites included previously established trials at the Elora

Research Station, at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) Woodslee and Ottawa

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locations, and at the University of Guelph Ridgetown Campus. New trials were also

established on growers fields in Pinkerton and Teeswater, ON and at the Trent

Experimental Farm in Peterborough, ON (Figure 3.1, Table 3.1). Soils were classified as

Teeswater silt loam (Grey Brown Podzolic; Pinkerton and Teeswater), Woolwhich silt

loam (Grey Brown Podzolic; Elora Research Station), Brandon Loam (Orthic Humic

Gleysol; AAFC-Ottawa), Otonabee loam (Orthic Melanic Brunisol; Trent Experimental

Farm) and Brookston clay loam (Orthic Humic Gleysol; U of G-Ridgetown and AAFC-

Woodslee). Soil texture varied between 155 and 440 g kg-1 clay and 258-709 g kg-1

sand, the total C was between 14 and 35 g kg-1, total N between 1.3 and 2.8 g kg-1, C: N

of 8.6 to 13 and pH in the range of 6.8-8.1 (Table 3.1). Previous crops included soybean

(Glycine max) at Pinkerton, Teeswater and U of G Ridgetown, corn at AAFC Woodslee,

AAFC-Ottawa, and Elora Research Station, and buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum) at

the Trent Experimental Farm. All sites were under conventional management receiving

mineral N fertilizers as their N source except for Trent Experimental Farm, which was

under organic management prior to site establishment.

The growing season rainfall and average temperature in 2014 ranged from 381-585 mm

and 14-17oC, respectively. The crop heat units (CHU) were between 2500 (Trent

Experimental Farm) and 3560 (AAFC-Woodslee).

At each of the experimental field sites, corn N response trials were setup in a randomized

complete block design to include 4 to 5 rates of fertilizer application ranging from 0-200

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kg N ha-1 (Table 3.3) in replication of four. Field trials were planted in grain corn and

fertilizer was applied at planting as 28% urea ammonium nitrate (UAN 28-0-0).

Figure 3.1 Map of locations of experimental field sites in Southwestern Ontario in 2014. n=7.

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Table 3.1 Summary of site characteristics for 2014 corn N response trials in Ontario (n=4).

Site Name Latitude and Longitude

Growing season rainfall

Mean growing

season air temperature

Crop heat unit

(CHU) Soil Texture Soil classification pH Total

C Total

N C:N Ratio

Clay Silt Sand

oN oW mm oC

g kg-1

g kg-1 Pinkerton 44o 13' 45.6564"N,

81o17'49.6032"W 395 17 2700 155 257 588 Teeswater silt loam

(Grey-brown Podzolic) 7.4 29 2.6 11.5 Teeswater 44o 1' 42.1932"N,

81o 22' 30.0108"W 395 17 2700 168 353 479 Teeswater silt loam

(Grey-brown Podzolic) 7.9 35 2.8 12.5 Elora Research Station 43o 38' 0.2544" N,

80o 23' 19.2480" W 410 14 2680 200 480 320 Woolwich silt loam

(Grey Brown Luvisol) 7.8 24 2.1 11.5 AAFC- Woodslee 42o 12' 52.4340" N,

82o 44' 54.0888"W 525 16.5 3560 406 336 258 Brookston clay loam

(Orthic Humic Gleysol) 6.6 19 2.2 8.6 U of G-Ridgetwon 42o 27' 3.6972" N,

81o 53' 22.9488" W 525 16.5 3340 440 250 310 Brookston clay loam

(Orthic Humic Gleysol) 7.8 22 1.9 11.3 Trent Experimental Farm 44o 21' 42.0588"N,

78o16'42.6000"W 463 15 2500 155 136 709 Otonabee loam (Orthic

Melanic Brunisol) 8.1 29 2.3 13 AAFC-Ottawa 45o22' 29.1612" N,

75o43' 26.9625"W 381 16 2900 350 270 380 Brandon clay loam

(Orthic Humic Gleysol) 6.8 14 1.3 10.3

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3.2.2 Soil sampling and analysis

Soil samples were collected in composite from each zero N fertilizer rate treatment at

each field trial at a depth of 0-30 cm 5-10 days prior to planting and fertilizer application.

A subsample was kept moist and stored at 4oC until analysis. On the remaining soil, soil

moisture content was determined by drying soil at 105 oC for 24 hours and the remaining

was air-dried and sieved (<2mm) before laboratory analysis. On air dried soils, soil pH

was determined in a 1:2 soil: deionized water suspension (Hendershot et al., 1993).

Particle size analysis was determined using the pipette method following organic matter

removal (Gee and Bauder, 1986). Total soil C and N was measured by the dry

combustion method using a CNS analyzer (VarioMAX cube, Elementar

Analysensysteme GmbH, Hanau, Germany).

3.2.3 Soil N test parameters

The KCl extractable NH4 and NO3 (KCl-NH4 and KCl-NO3) were extracted on moist soil

using 2M KCl at a soil to extractant ratio of 1:5 and a shaking time of 30 min.

Concentrations of NH4 and NO3 were determined colorimetrically using the modified

indophenol blue method (Sims et al., 2005) and an Epoch microplate spectrophotometer

(BioTek Instruments Inc., Winooski, VT, USA). The KCl-NO3 is hereafter referred to as

PPNT and the sum of KCl-NH4 and KCl-NO3 is hereafter referred to as SMNp, soil

mineral N at planting. Pool I was determined using a modified method of the long-term

aerobic incubation procedure as described by Curtin and Campbell (2008). Thirty grams

of soils were mixed with an equal amount of sand for coarse-textured soil and with the

twice the amount of sand for fine-textured soils and packed into 5cm plastic Buchner

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funnels. The soil to sand mixture was then re-wetted to 55% water filled pore space

(WFPS) by adding 175 mL 0.01M CaCl2 and applying vacuum. The soil and sand

mixture was incubated at 25oC for 14 days and leached on day 0 and 14 with 125 mL

0.01M CaCl2 followed by 25mL of zero-N nutrient solution (Curtin and Campbell, 2008).

Leachates were analyzed for NH4 and NO3 using a modified indophenol blue method

(Sims et al., 2005) and an Epoch microplate spectrophotometer (BioTek Instruments Inc.,

Winooski, VT, USA).

Water-extractable organic N (WEON) and C (WEOC) was determined as per Curtin et

al., 2006 and Chantigny et al., 2009. Briefly, 4 g of air-dried soil was shaken with 20 mL

room temperature water for 60 min. Extracts were then centrifuged at 4500xg for 20 min

and the supernatant was decanted and analyzed for organic C (WEOC) using an

Schimadzu TOC-VCPH (Schimadzu Scientific Instruments, Columbia, MD,USA). The

mineral N in the water extracts (WEMN) was determined using the modified indophenol

blue method as described above and the water soluble N (WSN) was determined using

the persulfate oxidation method as described by Cabrera and Beare (1993). The water

extractable organic N (WEON) was then calculated by subtracting the WEMN from the

WSN.

Particulate organic matter C and N (POMN and POMC) was determined by shaking 25g

field-moist soil overnight in a 5g/L sodium hexametaphosphate solution. Soil was then

passed through a 53-𝜇m sieve (Gregorich and Ellert, 1993). Retained sand and macro-

organic matter were dried and weighed and total C and N concentrations was determined

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using a CNS analyzer (VarioMAX cube, Elementar Analysensysteme GmbH, Hanau,

Germany).

3.2.4 Field-based indicators of corn N availability

Corn plants were harvested at maturity in October 2014. Eight to 10 plants were

randomly harvested within a 16 m2 subplot in each of the N rate treatments. Corn plants

were separated into their kernel, cob and stover portions. Grains were threshed and

weighed, and yields (GY) were adjusted to 15% moisture content. Stovers and grains

from each N rate treatment were dried in a drying oven at 60 oC and a subsample was

weighed to determine DM yield. The grain and stover were ground for determination of

total N concentration by dry combustion using a CNS analyzer (VarioMAX cube,

Elementar Analysensysteme GmbH, Hanau, Germany). The plant N uptake in zero N rate

treatment (PNU0N) was calculated from the grain and stover tissue N concentrations from

zero N rate treatments, corrected for any starter fertilizer N applied with the seeder at

planting. Relative yield (RY) and delta yield (∆Y) were then calculated as follows:

RY =

× 100

∆Y = GY optimal N − GY zero N

In addition, composite soil samples were collected from zero N rate treatments at a depth

of 0 to 30 cm at corn harvest and stored at -20˚C until analysis. The soils were extracted

for mineral N (NH4 and NO3) using 2M KCl. Soil mineral N at harvest was calculated as

the sum of KCl-NH4 and KCl-NO3 and is hereafter referred to as SMNh. Finally, the soil

N supply was calculated as PNU0N plus SMNh and was used as an indicator of plant

available N.

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Maximum Economic Rate of Nitrogen (MERN)

Maximum economic rate of N (MERN) for each field site was determined using the

following quadratic regression equation (McGongile et al., 1996 and Rashid et al., 2004):

Y=a + bN – cN2 (1)

Where: Y= corn grain yield (kg ha-1); N=fertilizer N applied (kg N ha-1); and a, b and c

are coefficients of quadratic response. The derivative of the quadratic equation (1) was

then taken to determine MERN:

dY/dN=b-2cN

Where dY/dN was set to the price rate of 1 kg fertilizer to the price of 1 kg of grain corn

or R to solve for N rate:

R=b-2cN

or N=(b-R)/2c

and therefore MERN=(b-R)/2c

R used in this study was determined using the 2014 corn fertilizer price: Corn price =

$0.18 kg-1, N fertilizer price= $1.38 kg-1.

The maximum economic yield was then calculated using the MERN for each site:

MEY=a+bMERN-cMERN2

Nitrogen Rate at 95% Maximum Yield (MYRN)

The N rate at 95% maximum yield (MYRN) for each site was calculated using the

quadratic regression equation given when plotting grain yield against N rates. The

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quadratic equation for each site was derived and then solved to determine the N fertilizer

rate required to achieve 95% of the maximum yield.

Corn N calculator

Nitrogen fertilizer rates were also calculated based on the current corn N Calculator

developed by OMAFRA (2010) (Figure 3.2) for comparison to MERN and MYRN.

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OMAFRA General Recommended Nitrogen Rates for Corn: Corn N Calculator

Western Ontario Cells Needing Input = (click to enter) Imperial Metric

A. Base N Requirement: (lb/ac) (kg/ha) Select soil type Loam 28 32

B. Yield Adjustment:

Enter proven yield (bu/ac) 150 116 129

C. Heat Unit Adjustment:

Enter CHU for your area 2800 0 0

D. Previous Crop Adjustment:

Select previous crop Soybeans -27 -30 Price Ratio Calculations

Enter expected corn price $2.80

Select fertilizer product:

Anhydrous Ammonia

Enter price per tonne of product:

$450

Nitrogen Price ($/lb actual N)

$0.25

Net Corn Price $2.80 E. Price Ratio Adjustment:

(lb/ac) (kg/ha)

Price Ratio ($N:$corn) 5.0 0 0 F. Total N Recommendation 117 132 G. Enter Starter N (lb/ac)

0 0

H. Enter Manure Credit (lb/ac)

0

I. Preplant Additional N 117 132 OR

if applying N as sidedress:

J. SideDress Additional N 93 105

Figure 3.2. A scheme of corn N calculator spreadsheet developed by OMAFRA for general recommendation of N rates for corn in Ontario.

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3.2.5 Statistical Analysis

Statistical analyses were done using SAS Enterprise Guide 5.3 (SAS Institute, Inc. 1996).

Data was first tested normality using the Kolmogorov–Smirnov test. Additional sites

from the first year of this study (Year 1-2013) that received variable rates of N fertilizer

were added to the Year 2- 2014 data to increase the size of our data set. These sites

included OMAFRA-Elora, Hart, Rutherford, Ilderton, Moorefield and Bornholm.

Recommended rates were calculated using the procedure for MERN and MYRN. Once

the recommended rates were calculated, the experimental sites were separated into

categories based on their maximum economic yields (MEY), determined using the

derived quadratic equation between GY and N rate. To satisfy the first objective,

correlation, the soil N test parameters were correlated to RY for the whole data set and

for each soil texture group using PROC CORR. Soil texture groups were formed based

on clay content using PROC CLUSTER. Calibration was attempted on soil N test

parameters that met the following criteria, i) significant pearson correlation coefficient

with RY in the correlation stage and ii) a significant pearson correlation coefficient with

both MERN and MYRN using PROC CORR. An interpretation table for the successful

soil N test was developed using the linear regression equation derived from the

relationship between RY and soil N test values and included five categories based on the

probability of yield increase: Very High, High, Optimum, Low, Very Low and Low. The

calibration curves were then constructed by correlating MERN and MYRN to the soil N

test values and regressed using PROC REG. The N fertilizer recommendations for soil N

test values were derived using the linear regression equation for parameters with

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significant relationships. Significance for correlations, regressions and clustering was

accepted at P<0.05.

3.4 Results

3.4.1 Soil N test parameters

The SMNp was highly variable across sites ranging from 8.7 to 21 mg kg-1 and

represented between 20 and 58% of the soil N supply (Table 3.2 and Table 3.3). Of the

total SMNp, 90% was in the NO3 form. Pool I was between 30.3 and 59.7 mg kg-1 and

represented 1.3 to 3% of the total soil N. Of the soil N supply, Pool I represented between

42 and 497%. The WSN ranged between 30.3 and 64.7 mg kg-1 and the proportion as

mineral N was highly variable across sites ranging from 7% at Woodslee to 30% at

Ridgetown. The WEON was less variable between sites ranging from 28.9 to 47.8 mg kg-

1 and was on average 1.9% of the total soil N. The WEOC ranged between 156-403 mg

kg-1 and the WEOC: N ratio was between 5.6 to 12, on average 1.8 times smaller than the

whole soil C: N (8.0-14.8) and a moderate linear relationship was observed between

WEOC and WEON (R2=0.49). The POMC ranged from 1247 to 6758 mg kg-1 and the

POMN was less variable (125-266 mg kg-1) and represented on average 8% of the total

soil N. The POMC: N was between 9.7-32.1, on average 1.8 times larger than the whole

soil C: N.

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Table 3.2 Means for the proposed soil N tests (standard deviation in parenthesis) from 7 corn N response trials in Ontario in 2014 (n=4).

SMNp† PPNT

KCl-NH4 Pool I WEMN WEON WSN WEOC WEOC: N POMC POMN POMC: N

Site Location

mg kg-1

Year 2 (2014)

Pinkerton 21

(3.9) 19.7 (3.9)

0.57 (0.04)

43 (13)

12.0 (0.37)

47.8 (2.8)

64.7 (4.4)

306 (11)

6.4 (0.5)

3305 (183)

216 (13)

15.42 (1.6)

Teeswater 11.2 (1.7)

9.8 (1.5)

1.5 (0.18)

37.8 (12)

10.3 (0.24)

41.4 (2.1)

56.1 (2.7)

230 (5.5)

5.6 (0.6)

6758 (268)

266 (13)

25.64 (4.6)

Elora Research Station 10.2 (1.2)

8.9 (1.1)

1.3 (0.23)

30.6 (10.6)

2.5 (014)

26.9 (3.3)

30.3 (4.2)

209 (8.3)

7.8 (0.6)

3817 (292)

146 (17)

29.31 (14)

AFFC-Woodslee 8.7

(2.6) 7.0

(3.0) 1.7

(0.83) 59.7 (3.1)

2.7 (0.17)

34.7 (8.6)

38.6 (9.2)

403 (11)

12 (3.6)

1247 (146)

125 (8.3)

9.67 (2.1)

UofG-Ridgetown 15.7 (5.5)

15.4 (6.4)

0.26 (0.42)

41.9 (3.9)

11.4 (0.78)

29.7 (11.1)

37.5 (8.1)

156 (25.6)

6.8 (3.3)

3100 (759)

159 (43)

20.83 (4.9)

Trent Experimental Farm 13.9 (8.6)

12.3 (10)

1.6 (0.59)

30.3 (8.9)

6.5 (0.35)

28.9 (9.4)

38.1 (10.8)

171 (2.5)

6.5 (2.6)

5632 (143)

175 (2.8)

32.12 (1.4)

AFFC-Ottawa 10.9 (1.5)

10.9 (1.6) UDL

39.2 (13.3)

5.9 (0.39)

27.5 (2.8)

36.1 (4.4)

186 (9.7)

6.8 (1.4)

1363 (87)

133 (3.3)

10.44 (3.4)

Mean# (n=28) 24.3 16.7 7.6 41.4 7.0 33.6 43.6 172 7.3 2480 119 24.33

SD (n=28) 8.7 8.5 5.3 13.2 3.0 5.8 8.4 91 1.8 1715 76 8.26 † SMNp= soil mineral N at 0-30cm soil depth prior to planting; KCl-NH4= extractable NH4 with 2M KCl at 0-30cm depth prior to planting; PPNT= extractable NO3 with 2M KCl at 0-30cm soil depth prior to planting; WEMN=water extractable mineral N; WEON=water extractable organic N; WSN=water soluble N; WEOC=water extractable organic C; WEOC:N=water extractable organic C to N ratio; POMC=particulate organic matter C; POMN=particulate organic matter N; POMC:N=particulate organic matter C to N ratio. UDL= under detection limit # Grand mean and SD

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3.3.2 Field-based indicators of corn N availability

The average GY, PNU0N and soil N supply for corn over the two years of the study are

shown in Table 3.3. For the 2014 growing season, the PNU0N was highly variable across

sites (50 to 194 kg N ha-1), the soil N supply was on average 135 kg N ha-1 and between 3

and 75 kg N ha-1 was remaining in the soil at harvest. Field parameters from the

additional sites from the first year of this study (Year 1-2013) that received variable rates

of N fertilizer are summarized in Table 3.3.

At each of the experimental sites, corn GY showed a strong quadratic response to

fertilizer N application (R2>0.93, Table 3.4, Figure 3.2). The MERN and MYRN were

successfully calculated for 5 of the 7 sites in Year 2-2014 and 6 out 8 sites in Year 1-

2013 (Table 3.4, Figure 3.3). The MERN values ranged from 106 to 212 kg N ha-1 while

MYRN values were consistently lower and ranged between 72 and 161 kg N ha-1. The

results from the corn N calculator are shown in Table 3.4. Recommended fertilizer N

rates based on the corn N calculator were on average within +/- 29% (109-212 kg N ha-1)

of the recommendations calculated using MERN but the response was inconsistent. The

corn N calculator over estimated N rate compared to MERN at Ilderton, Bornholm,

Pinkerton, Elora Research Station, AAFC-Woodslee and U of G-Ridgetown and

underestimated it at OMAFRA-Elora, Hart, Moorefield, Teeswater, Trent Experimental

Farm and AAFC-Ottawa. The largest deviations occurred at the Hart site were the corn N

calculator underestimated the MERN by 67 kg N ha-1 and at the U of G Ridgetown site

where it over estimated MERN by 50 kg N ha-1. Compared to MYRN, values calculated

using the corn N calculator were higher at all sites except for at the Hart and Trent

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Experimental Farm. The highest deviation from MYRN was seen at the U of G-

Ridgetown where the corn N calculator over-estimated MYRN by 74 kg N ha-1 (Table.

3.4).

Experimental sites were separated into two categories based on their MEY (Table 3.4).

The majority (5 of 7) of sites were grouped into the high yielding group (>9 Mg ha-1)

while the Trent Experimental Farm and AAFC-Ottawa sites were categorized into

category II as their highest yield only reached 7.4 Mg ha-1. Grain yield for zero N plots in

Category I sites were as low as 4.49 Mg ha-1 to as high as 9.03 Mg ha-1. For the Pinkerton

site the addition of fertilizer only increased yields slightly (1.64 Mg ha-1) whereas at the

Elora Research Station, N fertilizer application almost tripled the grain yield (12 Mg ha-

1). The relative yield (RY) ranged from 42 to 112% and no sites over both years were

considered unresponsive to N fertilizer based on the MERN.

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Table 3.3 Mean values for crop yield, crop response indicators and soil N supply (standard deviation in parenthesis) from 13 corn N response trials across Ontario (n=4) established in 2013 and 2014.

Site Rates applied Zero N

Yield Full N Yield ∆Y †

RY

PNU0N

Soil N Supply

Year 1-2013 kg N ha-1 Mg ha-1 % kg ha-1

OMAFRA-Elora 0,56,112,168,224 6.99

(0.5) 11.23 (0.8)

4.16 (0.5)

63.7 (2.2)

87 (20)

140 (21)

Hart 0,56,112,168,224 4.33

(0.5) 11.16 (1.0)

7.07 (1.1)

55.6 (5.0)

98 (24)

145 (22)

Rutherford 0,56,112,168,224 6.67

(1.1) 12.79 (0.9)

6.42 (0.5)

55.1 (6.9)

116 (29)

156 (29)

Ilderton 0,56,112,168,224 6.44

(1.6) 11.48 (1.2)

4.89 (2.8)

64.1 (15)

67 (12)

123 (12)

Moorefield 0,56,112,168,224 6.39

(0.9) 10.60 (0.8)

4.11 (1.0)

69.3 (7.0)

126 (13)

189 (14)

Bornholm 0,56,112,168,224 6.78

(0.8) 11.79 (0.2)

4.78 (0.6)

60.3 (7.2)

94 (14)

156 (17)

Year 2-2014

Pinkerton 0,94,134,202 9.03

(0.5) 10.85 (0.5)

1.64 (0.7)

101 (8)

194 (7.3)

269 (23)

Teeswater 0,94,134,202 7.19

(0.5) 11.35 (0.3)

4.10 (0.4)

69.9 (3)

177 (9.0)

202 (11)

Elora Research Station 0,28,57,115,188 4.67

(0.5) 11.98 (0.6)

6.91 (0.5)

42.1 (5)

61 (3.5)

98 (9.2)

AAFC-Woodslee 0,50,100,150,200 4.49

(0.4) 10.08 (0.8)

5.31 (1.1)

42.0 (7)

50 (6.2)

81 (13)

U of G-Ridgetown 0,50,100,150 8.23

(1.0) 12.34 (1.8)

3.05 (2.4)

54.6 (13)

92 (30)

115 (26)

Trent Experimental Farm 0,30,60,120,180 3.7

(1.1) 5.6

(0.4) 1.9

(0.8) 64.62

(17) 69

(18) 86

(15)

AFFC-Ottawa 0,50,100,150 3.5

(1.4) 7.1

(0.9) 3.5

(2.2) 51.95

(24) 55

(15) 58

(14)

Mean # (n=52) 6.46 11.31 4.78 57.61 97 135

SD (n=52) 1.46 0.99 1.58 12.82 7.3 17 †=∆Y=delta yield=(GY optimal N-GY zero N); RY=Relative Yield=[(GY zero N/GY optimal N) x100]; MERN=Maximum economic rate of N; MEY=maximum economic yield; PNU0N= plant N uptake in zero N plots; Soil N Supply=PNU0N + SMNh; ¶=Maximum yield was not reached and therefore MERN could not be accurately calculated # Grand mean and SD

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Table 3.4. Recommended rate of N fertilizer (MERN and MYRN) for each site in 2013 and 2014 using the quadratic equation based on corn yield response to fertilizer N rates (Figure 3.3), and recommended rate based on the corn N Calculator.

† =quadratic equation based on the response of corn grain yield to fertilizer N rate (Figure 3.3) where y=grain yield and x= N fertilizer rate. MERN=maximum economic rate of N; MEY=maximum economic yield; MYRN= N rate at 95% of the maximum yield; Corn N Calculator= N fertilizer rates based on the Corn N calculator by OMAFRA

Site Category Quadratic Equation† R2 MEY MERN MYRN Corn N

Calculator Year 1 (2013)

kg N ha-1

OMAF-Elora I y = -0.0001x2 + 0.0484x + 6.9917 0.98 11.15 148 109 125 Hart I y = -0.0001x2 + 0.057x + 4.3288 0.98 11.40 212 161 145

Rutherford I y = -7E-05x2 + 0.0423x + 6.6656 ¶ 0.98 13.09 257 177 186 Ilderton I y = -0.0001x2 + 0.0539x + 6.4486 0.99 11.33 158 128 168

Moorefield I y = -0.0001x2 + 0.0427x + 6.3902 0.99 10.50 163 125 149 Bornholm I y = -0.0001x2 + 0.0497x + 6.7754 0.99 11.56 166 141 177

Year 2 (2014)

Pinkerton I y = -7E-05x2 + 0.0232x + 9.0273 0.99 10.66 106 72 121 Teeswater I y = -0.0001x2 + 0.0489x + 7.1913 0.98 11.29 145 110 128

U of G-Elora I y = -0.0004x2 + 0.1016x + 4.6653 0.97 11.57 126 119 153 AAFC-Woodslee I y = -0.0001x2 + 0.0548x + 4.4947 0.98 9.81 172 152 196

U of G-Ridgetown I y = 3E-05x2 + 0.0218x + 8.2316 ¶ 0.93 11.29 160 138 212 Trent Exp. Farm II y = -3E-05x2 + 0.0153x + 3.7596 0.98 5.3 132 138 109 AFFC-Ottawa II y = -7E-05x2 + 0.0347x + 3.5272 ¶ 0.98 7.4 184 123 134

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Continued…

=MERN=95%RY

=MERN=95%RY

=MERN=95%RY

=MERN=95%RY

=MERN=95%RY

=MERN=95%RY

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Figure 3.3 Corn grain yield response curves to N applied at all individual experimental corn trials that obtained maximum yield, each point is the mean of replicates (n=4).

3.3.3 Soil test correlation and calibration

Relative yield across sites explained about 70% of the variation in the soil N supply

(Figure 3.4). Correlation coefficients between potential soil N tests and RY are shown in

Table 3.5. For the whole data set, the water extractable fractions WEMN (r=0.60,

P<0.001), WEON (r=0.36, P<0.01) and WSN (r=0.58, P<0.001), and PPNT (r=0.35,

P<0.01) and NH4 (r=0.27, P<0.05) were significantly correlated to RY. The top three

with the highest correlation coefficients are shown in Figure 3.5.

=MERN=95%RY

=MERN=95%RY

=MERN=95%RY

=MERN=95%RY

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For coarse textured soils (Cs-T; clay< 240 g kg-1), the water extractable fractions:

WEMN (r=0.80, P<0.001), WEON (r=0.50, P<0.01) and WSN (r=0.67, P<0.001), Pool I

(r=0.43, P<0.05), Pool I + SMNp (r=0.49, P<0.05), and POMC: N (r=-0.38, P<0.05)

showed significant correlations with RY. In medium textured soils (Md-T, clay >240 g

kg-1), WEMN (r=0.72, P<0.001), WEOC (r=0.55, P<0.05), WEOC: N (r=-0.55, P<0.05),

POMC (r=0.55, P<0.05) and POMC: N (r=0.60, P<0.05) showed strong correlations

with RY. The top two correlations for Cs-T soils and top three correlations for Md-T soils

are shown in Figure 3.6 and 3.7, respectively.

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Figure 3.4 Relationship between soil N supply and relative yield (RY) for corn N trials in Ontario in 2013 and 2014 (n=49).

r= 0.69, P<0.001

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350

RY (%

)

Soil N supply (kg ha-1)

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Table 3.5. Correlation coefficients (r) between soil N tests and RY for 2013 and 2014 Category I field sites field sites for the whole dataset (DS), coarse textured soils (Cs-T soils, clay ≤ 240 g kg-1) and medium textured soils (Md-T soils, clay > 240 g kg-1) RY Parameter Whole

DS Cs-T

(n=28) Md-T (n=14)

Pool I + SMNp 0.16 0.49* -0.28 SMNp 0.11 0.18 0.44 PPNT 0.35** 0.22 -0.10 NH4 -0.27* -0.26 0.44 Pool I 0.17 0.43* -0.53 WEMN 0.60*** 0.80*** 0.72** WEON 0.36** 0.50** 0.07 WSN 0.58*** 0.67*** 0.35 WEOC -0.07 0.52* -0.55* WEOC: N -0.24 -0.11 -0.55* POMC 0.14 0.007 -0.55* POMN 0.15 0.28 -0.48 POMC: N 0.04 -0.38* 0.60*

*=P<0.05, **=P<0.01, ***=P<0.001

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Figure 3.5. Relationship between relative yield and a PPNT, b WEMN and c WSN for the whole data set (n=49).

r=0.35, P<0.01

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 10 20 30

RY (%

)

PPNT (mg kg-1)

r=0.60, P<0.001

0 10 20 30WEMN (mg kg-1)

br=0.58, P<0.001

0 50 100WSN (mg kg-1)

ca

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Figure 3.6. Relationship between RY and a Pool I + SMNp and b WEMN in Cs-T soils (n=28).

r=0.49, P<0.050

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 100 200 300

RY (%

)

Pool I+SMNp (mg kg-1)

a r=0.80, P<0.001

0 10 20 30WEMN (mg kg-1)

b

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Figure 3.7. Relationship between RY and a WEMN, b WEOC: N and c POMC: N for Md-T soils (n=21).

r=0.72, P<0.001

0102030405060708090

0 5 10 15

RY (%

)

WEMN (mg kg-1)

a r=-0.55, P<0.05

0 10 20WEOC:N

b r=0.60, P<0.05

0 20 40POMC:N

c

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Based on the correlation results between RY, MERN and MYRN (Table 3.5 and 3.6), we

chose to perform calibration on PPNT and WSN for the whole data set to predict the

proper rate of N fertilizer. Calibration was chosen for both MERN and MYRN because of

the dependence of MERN on market prices of both fertilizer and corn which can fluctuate

year to year depending on natural gas prices and market demand for corn. In the 2013 and

2014 growing season (Figure 3.3) it is apparent that market prices were not limiting N

fertilizer application rates as rates were consistently greater that MYRN. The PPNT was

chosen because it was moderately related to RY (r=0.35, P<0.01, Table 3.5) and had a

significant inverse linear relationship with MERN (R2=0.47, P<0.001, Table 3.6) and

MYRN (R2=0.56, P<0.00, Table 3.6). For the water extractable fractions, we found that

mineral portion showed the strongest correlation with RY(r=0.60, P<0.001, Table 3.5)

however it could not predict the MERN (r=-0.20, P>0.05, Table 3.6). The total WSN had

a similar relationship with RY as WEMN (r=0.60, P<0.001, Table 3.5) but had a

significant linear inverse relationship with MERN (R2=0.60, P<0.001, Table 3.6), when

the Elora site was removed from the correlation, and with MYRN (R2=0.48, P<0.001,

Table 3.6). The Elora site was removed from the regression with MERN because there

was an inconsistent response between MERN and MYRN, which was not seen for any

other site. This indicates that an error during analysis may have occurred. It was not

considered an outlier but removing the site did improve the relationship. The Pool I +

SMNp in Cs-T soils was also significantly correlated to RY and MERN but not MYRN

(Table 3.5) and therefore was not calibrated. Other parameters that were significantly

correlated to RY but not both MERN and MYRN included POMC and POMC:N.

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Interpretation tables for PPNT and WSN are presented in Table 3.7. For the PPNT, soil

test levels >18 mg kg-1 were considered High and <2 mg kg-1 were considered Very low.

For WSN, values greater than 70 mg kg-1 were categorized as High and <26 mg kg-1 were

considered Very low. Once these categories were established, calibration curves were

constructed for each of the soil N test parameters in order to assign recommended

fertilizer N rates to each category. The calibration curves were established by correlating

the MERN and MYRN to corresponding soil N test values (Figure 3.8).

Using the calibration curve for PPNT with MERN and MYRN, the concentration of soil

N test varied between 0 and 18 mg kg-1 and N fertilizer rates were calculated using the

derived linear equations MERN=-5.15 (PPNT)+203 and MYRN=-4.72 (PPNT)+167.

Recommended N rates are presented in Table 3.8. Fertilizer rates based on the MYRN

were 28-36 kg N ha-1 lower than MERN depending on the PPNT concentration. The

WSN soil N test values ranged from 0 to 70 mg kg-1 and the MERN and MYRN N

fertilizer recommendations were determined based on the derived linear equation

MERN=-2.02(WSN)+250 and MYRN=-1.65(WSN)+197.1. Rates of N are presented in

Table 3.9. Fertilizer recommendations were between 28 and 57 kg N ha-1 lower for

MYRN than for MERN depending on the WSN concentration.

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Table 3.6. Correlation coefficients (r) between soil N test parameters and MERN and MYRN for 2013 and 2014 field sites the whole dataset (DS), coarse textured soils (Cs-T soils, clay ≤ 240 g kg-1) and medium textured soils (Md-T soils, clay > 240 g kg-1). MERN MYRN Parameter Whole

DS Cs-T

(n=28) Md-T (n=14)

Whole DS

Cs-T (n=28)

Md-T (n=14)

Pool I + SMNp -0.11 -0.18 -0.12 -0.26 -0.42* 0.73** SMNp -0.45** -0.49** -0.35 -0.45** -0.46* -0.23 PPNT -0.52** -0.54** 0.34 -0.52** -0.53** -0.30 NH4 0.31 0.64*** -0.15 0.27 0.58** -0.60* Pool I 0.07 -0.17 0.16 -0.0008 -0.33 0.72** WEMN -0.30 -0.17 -0.60* -0.53*** -0.47* -0.65* WEON -0.37 -0.42* -0.10 -0.50*** -0.61*** 0.44 WSN -0.51*** -0.51** -0.44 -0.63*** -0.68*** 0.03 WEOC 0.12 -0.12 0.28 0.08 -0.48** 0.97*** WEOC: N 0.38* 0.41* 0.32 0.45** 0.35 0.82*** POMC -0.50** -0.30 0.87*** -0.32* -0.12 0.12 POMN -0.40* -0.28 0.95*** -0.38* -0.27 0.18 POMC: N -0.37* -0.15 -0.91*** -0.11 0.09 -0.35

*=P<0.05, **=P<0.01, ***=P<0.001

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Table 3.7 Interpretation table for successful soil N tests PPNT and WSN using linear response curves derived from the relationship between RY and soil N test. For PPNT, RY= 3.24(PPNT)+34. For WSN, RY=1.37(WSN)+3.4.

Soil N Test Soil Test Category Soil Test Level

(mg kg-1) Probability of yield increase

PPNT High >18 <5% Optimum 11-18 5-30% Low 2-11 30-60% Very Low <2 >60%

WSN High >70 <5% Optimum 48-70 5-30% Low 26-48 30-60% Very Low <26 >60%

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Figure 3.8 Relationship between a PPNT and MERN b PPNT and MYRN c WSN and MERN and d WSN and MYRN; x=Elora site.

y = -5.16x + 203R² = 0.47, P<0.01, n=35

0

50

100

150

200

250

0 10 20 30

MER

N (k

g ha

-1)

PPNT (mg kg-1)

ay = -4.72x + 167

R² = 0.56, P<0.0001, n=350

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

0 10 20 30

MY

RN

(kg

N h

a-1)

PPNT (mg kg-1)

b

y = -2.02x + 250R² = 0.60, P<0.001, n=35

0

50

100

150

200

250

0 20 40 60 80

MER

N (k

g ha

-1)

WSN (mg kg-1)

cy = -1.65x + 197

R² = 0.48, P<0.0001, n=350

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

0 20 40 60 80

MY

RN

(kg

N h

a-1)

WSN (mg kg-1)

d

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Table 3.8 Recommended N fertilizer rates based on the linear relationship between PPNT concentration and MERN (MERN=-5.16 (PPNT)+203; R2 =0.47) and MYRN (MYRN=-4.72(PPNT)+167; R2=0.56).

Soil Test Level (mg kg-1)

MERN Fertilizer Rate

(kg N ha-1)

MYRN Fertilizer rate

(kg N ha-1) >18 110 82 17 115 87 16 120 91 15 126 96 14 131 101 13 136 106 12 141 110 11 146 116 10 151 120 9 157 124 8 162 129 7 167 134 6 172 139 5 177 143 4 182 148 3 188 153 2 193 158 1 198 162 0 203 167

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Table 3.9. Recommended N fertilizer rate based on the linear relationship between WSN concentrations and MERN (MERN=-2.02(WSN)+250; R2=0.60) and MYRN (MYRN=-1.65(WSN)+197; R2=0.48).

Soil Test Level (mg kg-1)

MERN Fertilizer Rate

(kg N ha-1)

95% RY Fertilizer rate

(kg N ha-1) >70 110 82 65 120 90 60 130 98 55 140 106 50 150 114 45 160 123 40 170 131 35 180 139 30 190 147 25 200 156 20 210 164 15 220 172 10 230 181 5 240 189 0 250 197

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3.4 Discussion

3.4.1 Soil N test parameters

The relatively high SMNp values (majority in NO3 form) compared with the long-term

data reported by OMAFRA (11 mg kg-1) is consistent with the warmer temperatures and

lower than normal May rainfall in 2014 (Environment Canada, 2014). These

environmental conditions in 2014 resulted in less NO3 leaching and high nitrification

rates.

The high range in percentage of the soil N supply that Pool I represented indicates that

the selected soils have contrasting sizes of the readily mineralizable N pool. The average

Pool I values observed in this year of the study were close to the average observed in

Chapter 2 of this study (42 mg kg-1) indicating that the Pool I is a relatively stable pool of

N. For the WSN fraction was found that the mineral portion represented on average 22%

of the WSN, which is similar to values found for soils under unfertilized corn

monoculture (15%) and soils under a corn soybean rotation receiving mineral fertilizer

(20%; Gregorich et al., 2003). The relationship between WEOC and WEON (R2=0.49)

was weaker than observed for soils under corn monoculture in Quebec, Canada (R2=0.69,

Curtin and Wright, 2006) which can be attributed to the uncoupling of C to N in fertilized

system, as an increase in N is not accompanied by an increase in C (McDowell, 2003),

resulting in a lower C: N ratio of WEOM. The high percentage of total N as WEON

indicates that these soils are high in soluble N compounds (Murphy et al., 2000; Wander,

2004). The WEON fraction also represented a considerably higher percentage of total N

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compared with the literature (0.75%, Chantigny, 2003) indicating that this fraction may

be an important source of N for field crops at the selected sites in Ontario.

The wide range found in POMC and POMN may be due to the differences in

management practices and location as these factors have a direct influence on the size of

this fraction (Griffin and Porter, 2004; Haynes, 2005). The POMN values were lowest

where fields were under continuous corn (AAFC-Ottawa and Woodslee and Elora

Research Station). The proportion of TN as POMN (8%) was within the range reported in

the literature (Gregorich et al., 2006, Sharifi et al., 2007) and the high C: N ratio of this

fraction is characteristic of soils receiving plant residues with high C: N ratios as the only

source of POM (Sequeira and Alley, 2011; St.Luce et al., 2011).

3.4.2 Field Indicators of corn N availability

A wide range of soil N supply was observed across experimental sites indicating that

selected soils have varying productivity. A wide range in residual N at harvest (SMNh)

was also observed across sites but there was no consistent pattern across sites. Previous

research has attributed the amount of residual mineral N to differences in soil moisture

regime (Jokela and Randall, 1989) and management practices (Rasouli et al., 2014). The

MERN and MYRN values obtained in this study (72-212 kg N ha-1) are in the same range

reported by OMAFRA (107-237 kg N ha-1; 2013) for corn response trials in southwestern

Ontario in 2013. The high recommended N rates (>72 kg N ha-1) indicates that none of

our sites had enough N to fully supply corn demand but may also be due to the high N

requirement of high yielding corn varieties. Typically soil test calibration studies require

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inclusion of both responsive and unresponsive soils to accurately predict critical soil test

levels (Dahnke and Olsen, 1990). Therefore, we could not accurately determine the

critical level for any of our soil N tests.

The high variability of response of sites to N application and inconsistencies between the

corn N calculator, and MERN and MYRN indicates that other variables that are not

included in the corn N calculator may affect the N rate. These include management

history (instead of previous crop, St.Luce et al., 2011), soil properties such as pH,

electrical conductivity (EC), cation exchange capacity (CEC) and total C and total N

(Dharmakeerthi et al., 2005; Subbarao et al., 2006). The pH in this study varied from 6.6

to 8.1, total C from 14 to 35 g kg-1 and total N from 1.3 to 2.8 g kg-1 (Table 3.1). The pH

has an influence on the activity of the microbes, the optimal range is between 6 and 7

(Hartel, 2005), and also plays a role in nutrient availability to plants (Havlin et al., 2005).

The higher pH (8.1) at the Trent Experimental Farm suggests that mineralization and

availability of nutrients was decreased at this site, which is reflected in the soil N supply

(Table 3.3) even though it had relatively high total C and total N. On the other hand, the

AAFC Ottawa site had optimal pH but low total C and total N, which may explain its low

soil N supply. The total C and total N in the soil is a reflection of the SOM content,

which holds the substrate for N mineralization (Ros et al., 2015). Ros et al. (2015) found

that the ability of the soil to supply N (measured as N uptake in an unfertilized mineral

grassland) was a direct reflection of the SOM levels in the soil. For the remainder of the

sites, Pinkerton and Teeswater soils had a near neutral pH (7.4-7.9), had the highest total

C and total N and had the highest soil N supply (202-269 kg N ha-1). These results

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indicate that soil properties such as pH, total C and total N play an important role in N

availability to crops and should be taken into consideration when evaluating the

productivity of a soil.

The inconsistencies between the corn N calculator and MERN and MYRN indicates that

providing recommendations based on yield potential and ignoring the wide range of soil

N supply capacity of Ontario soils can result in substantial over or under fertilization and

is therefore not a sound indicator of crop N needs (Kachanoski et al., 1996; Davis et al.,

1996, O’Halloran et al., 2004).

3.4.3 Soil N test correlation and calibration

The WSN was more strongly correlated to RY than PPNT (r=0.58 and r=0.35,

respectively) and explained 13% more variability in MERN (Figure 3.8). We observed

that the NO3 at planting was an important contributor to corn N uptake as it represented

up to 30% of the soil N supply and was significantly related to RY, MERN, MYRN. This

result is inconsistent with the results from Chapter 2 of this study where PPNT was not a

good predictor of corn response to fertilizer addition. The PPNT has already been

calibrated for corn in Ontario (OMAFRA, 2009) but many producers have shifted

towards use of expected yields or visual observations of N deficiency/sufficiency to

predict their fertilizer N rates (O’Halloran et al., 2004)) even though this method results

in a greater degree of under or over fertilization.

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The movement away from the PPNT may be due to the large in-field variability requiring

a high number of samples to be taken per field as O’Halloran et al. (2004) found that soil

NO3 was not a good predictor of yield or yield response of corn at two sites in

southwestern Ontario when sampling was done on in 3x10 m grids. Furthermore, soil

NO3 has shown varying success as a predictor of N availability as it is dependent on early

season climatic conditions resulting in the potential for substantial losses due to leaching

between time of sample collection and planting (Sharifi et al., 2009). In this study, the

PPNT concentrations in 2014 were on average twice as high (16.7 mg kg-1) compared

concentrations observed in 2013 (6.89 mg kg-1), which corresponds with the lower

average rainfall in 2014 (453 mm) compared to 2013 (546 mm).

The success of the WSN as a soil N test in this study indicates that both the mineral and

organic portion of the water extractable fraction are important when determining the

availability of N to crops. Literature on the WSN is rare as most studies report only the

organic portion (Curtin et al., 2006; Haney et al., 2012; St. Luce et al., 2014). As WSN is

hypothesized to be the product of microbial decomposition of crop residues and organic

amendments and is a mobile and available pool of organic N present in soil solution

(Murphy et al., 2000; Chantigny, 2003), these results suggest that the combination of

both the organic and mineral portion is important when determining availability of N

from soluble fractions. The wide range in proportion of WSN as WEMN (7-30%)

observed in this study may indicate that the mineral portion is an indicator of

mineralization conditions and can better explain the variability in yield response across

sites than WEON alone.

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The composition and therefore biodegradability will ultimately determine the fate of

soluble organic N as this pool can also be composed of recalcitrant compounds that are

resistant to further microbial decomposition (Smolander et al., 1995; Gregorich, 2003;

Wander, 2004). Furthermore, it is apparent that the WSN is more consistent across years

compared to the PPNT and therefore a more reliable index of plant available N. In this

year of this study, the WSN was on average 43 mg kg-1 and ranged between 30 and 65 mg

kg-1, which is within the range observed in 2013 (27-89 mg kg-1) and close to the average

(42 mg kg-1). The only limitation to this procedure is the marginal increase in cost and

labour associated with determining organic N (persulfate oxidation and subsequent

mineral N analysis) compared to the 2M KCl extraction used to determine NO3.

3.5 Conclusion

The PPNT and WSN in the soil prior to planting and fertilizer application were the most

successful at predicting N fertilizer recommendations for corn in southwestern Ontario

for the 2013 and 2014 growing seasons. The soils N tests successfully detected the N

deficiency in fields under conventional corn production receiving primarily mineral

fertilizer as an N source. The corn N calculator was not successful in predicting the

MERN and MYRN and therefore is not an accurate indicator of crop N needs. For the

PPNT, the proposed model MERN=-5.16 (PPNT)+203 and MYRN (MYRN=-

4.72(PPNT)+167 could successfully determine fertilizer N rate when concentrations are

below 18 mg kg-1. Although both the PPNT and WSN showed promising results in this

chapter, they did not in Chapter 2. This supports the dependence on soil N on climatic

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factors that result in inconsistencies as previously observed in other studies. The model

we have proposed for WSN, MERN=-2.02(WSN)+250 and MYRN (MYRN=-

1.65(WSN)+197 can easily be used for N fertilizer application rates when WSN is below

70 mg kg-1. An increase in WSN of 5 mg kg-1 decreases fertilizer N requirement for corn

by 8 kg N ha-1. None of our sites were unresponsive to N and therefore we could not

determine the critical soil N test for PPNT or WSN. Further research is required to test

the suitability for each of the proposed linear models over a greater spatial and temporal

area.

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GENERAL CONCLUSIONS

This study attempted to improve fertilizer N recommendations for corn in Ontario by

considering the soil mineralizable N. Quantifying the potential for Ontario soils to supply

N using the long-term aerobic incubation showed that Ontario soils have a wide range in

soil N supply capacity and have the potential to meet corn N demand. It was also found

that the higher total C and N content in soils, the higher the potential of the soil to supply

N. It is suggested that management practices should be focused on increasing the organic

N pool within the soil, which will decrease the dependence on mineral N fertilizer to

supplement crop N needs. The mineral N in the soil at planting (SMNp) contributed

approx. 30% of the soil N supply throughout the growing season indicating that

mineralization of SON is an important contributor to the soil N supply in humid

temperate climates.

This study was executed over two years and separated into two growing seasons. In the

first year, the current pre-plant N test was found to be a poor predictor of crop N

availability and the readily mineralizable N, Pool I, was a more robust predictor of crop

N availability (RY). Grouping soils based on soil texture also revealed relationships

dependent on clay content indicating that this parameter should be taken into account

when determining crop available N.

When combing data from the first and second growing seasons, it was found that the

PPNT and WSN at planting were successful at predicting fertilizer N rates. The success

of both PPNT and WSN only when combing the two years of data supports the inherent

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variability of soil N as it is dependent on early season climate. Future research should

focus on readily available pools of N (such as WSN) as indicators of N availability under

field conditions.

Finally, the large variability in soil chemical and physical properties observed in this

study, their influence on soil N mineralization and the inability of the corn N calculator to

successfully predict actual N fertilizer needs indicates that providing recommendations

based on expected yield can result in substantial over or under fertilization. Soil

properties such as pH, total C and total N should also be taken into consideration when

providing recommendation as this will result in more environmentally and economically

sound recommendations.

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APPENDIX

Appendix I. Relationship between RY and WEON in Cs-T soils

Appendix II. Relationship between WEON in Md-T soils

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Appendix III. Relationship between RY and WEOC:N in Cs-T soils

Appendix IV. Relationship between RY and WEOC:N for the whole dataset

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Appendix V. Relationship between RY and POMC for the whole dataset

Appendix VI. Relationship between RY and POMC in Md-T soils

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Appendix VII. Relationship between RY and POMC in Cs-T soils

Appendix VIII. Relationship between RY and POMC:N in Cs-T soils

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Appendix IX. Relationship between RY and POMC:N for the whole data set.

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