Waste composts as nitrogen fertilizers for forage leys

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Abstract

Two field experiments, conventional grass ley and organic grass-clover ley, were established with barley as a nurse crop in spring 2000 and given either low or high fertilization with mineral fertilizer (Mineral) or composts. The compost types were municipal biowaste (Biowaste), biowaste + sewage sludge (BioSludge) and cattle manure (Manure). Plant yields and nitrogen (N) uptakes were measured for three years and efficiency of N utilization was estimated. In single application of compost, the total N was mainly in organic form and less than 10% was in inorganic form. Along with increasing amount of inorganic N applied in compost, the yield, N uptake and N recovery increased during the application year. The highest compost N recovery in the application year was 12%, found with Biowaste. In the following years the highest N recovery was found where the lowest total N had been applied. Clover performance was improved in the organic grass-clover ley established with BioSludge fertilization, producing total ley yield comparable with Manure compost. High total N application in composts caused high N surplus and low N use efficiency over three years. Generally, moderate compost fertilization is suitable for ley crops when supplemented with mineral N fertilizer or clover N fixation. © Agricultural and Food Science.

Figures

  • Table 1. Weather conditions in Mikkeli during the experiments and in the reference period 1961–1990.
  • Fig. 1. Total dry matter yield and plant N uptake in the conventional grass ley experiment. Vertical lines indicate standard deviations of measurement replicates. Means denoted by different letters differ significantly from each other within the low (a/b) or high application (A/B) with p<0.05. When denoted by ‘, the difference is marginally significant at 0.05<p<0.10. (0-ctrl = unfertilized control)
  • Fig. 2. Yield and N uptake in the barley nurse crop in 2000 and in grass-clover ley in 2001 and 2002 in the organic experiment. Vertical lines indicate standard deviations of measurement replicates. Fertilization means significantly different (p<0.05) from each other within low (a/b) or high application (A/B) are marked with differing letters above the bar, with similar colours as in the bars. When denoted by ‘, the difference is marginally significant at 0.05<p<0.10. (0-ctrl = unfertilized control)
  • Table 4. Efficiency of applied fertilizer N estimated with N recovery (%) in conventional grass and organic grass-clover ley. Means denoted by different letters differ significantly from each other within the low (a/b) or high application (A/B) with p<0.05, or marginally significantly with 0.05<p<0.10 when denoted by the symbol ‘ (SD=standard deviation).
  • Fig. 3. The N balance and N use efficiency (NUE) over a three-year period in the conventional and organic experiment. Estimates were calculated as “N balance = N input – N output” and “NUE% = (N output / N input) × 100”. Means denoted by different letters differ significantly from each other within the low (a/b/c) or high (A/B/C) application, with p<0.05. (0-ctrl = unfertilized control)

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Tontti, T., Nykänen, A., & Kuisma, M. (2009). Waste composts as nitrogen fertilizers for forage leys. Agricultural and Food Science, 18(1), 57–75. https://doi.org/10.2137/145960609788066807

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