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2016 | 21 | 3 |

Tytuł artykułu

Sulphur and phosphorus content as well as the activity of hydrolases in soil fertilised with macroelements

Treść / Zawartość

Warianty tytułu

Języki publikacji

EN

Abstrakty

EN
Arylsulphatase and phosphatase may give some indication of the soil potential to perform specific biochemical reactions, and are also important contributors to soil fertility. Soil was collected from a field experiment set up at the Agricultural Experiment Station at Grabów by the Institute of Soil Science and Plant Cultivation (IUNG) in Puławy. Soils samples from fields cropped with spring barley and winter wheat were collected in October 2008. The experiment involved only mineral fertilisation: increasing doses of ammonium nitrate (N0-0 kg N ha–1 – 150 kg N ha–1 for spring barley and N0-0 kg N ha–1 to 200 kg N ha–1 for winter wheat) and fertilisation with P – 30.5 kg P . ha-1, K – 116.2 kg K . ha-1, Ca - 143 kg Ca. ha-1, Mg – 42.2 kg Mg . ha-1 and 30 kg S . ha-1. Sulphate sulphur was determined with the Bardsley-Lancaster method, while available phosphorus as well as the activity of arylsulphatase, acid phosphatase and alkaline phosphatase were assayed according to Tabatabai and Bremner. An effect of fertilisation with macronutrients and with increasing doses of nitrogen on the content of sulphates in soil was found in the fields cropped with either test plant. The highest content of sulphates was assayed in the soil from the treatments fertilised with macronutrients, except for Ca in soil under spring barley and Mg - under wheat. In the soil sampled under the test plants untreated with nitrogen, the content of available phosphorus was the highest. Increasing nitrogen doses significantly decreased the content of PE-R and sulphates. The Polish Norm classifies it as soils of a medium content of phosphorus. It was demonstrated that the soil content of sulphates available to plants is affected by the presence of ions derived from fertilisation with Ca, Mg and K. This is most probably due to the sorption of sulphates and their unavailability in the soil solution.

Słowa kluczowe

Wydawca

-

Rocznik

Tom

21

Numer

3

Opis fizyczny

p.847-858,ref.

Twórcy

  • Department of Biochemistry, University of Science and Technology in Bydgoszcz, Bernardynska 6-8, 85-029 Bydgoszcz, Poland
  • Department of Biochemistry, University of Science and Technology in Bydgoszcz, Bydgoszcz, Poland
autor
  • Department of Biochemistry, University of Science and Technology in Bydgoszcz, Bydgoszcz, Poland

Bibliografia

  • Aulakh M.S., Malhi S.S. 2005. Interactions of nitrogen with other nutrients and water: Effect on crop yield and quality, nutrient use efficiency, carbon sequestration, and environmental pollution. Adv. Agron., 86: 341-409.
  • Bardsley C.E., Lancaster J.D. 1960. Determination of reserve sulfur and solube sulfates in soil. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. Proc., 24: 265-268.
  • Ciereszko I., Szczygła A., Żebrowska E. 2011. Phosphate deficiency affects acid phosphatase activity and growth of two wheat varieties. J. Plant Nutrit., 34(6): 815-829
  • Emnova E.E., Daraban O. V., Bizgan I.V., Toma S.I. 2014. Effect of phosphoric fertilizer and starter rates of nitrogen fertilizers on the phosphatase activity in the rhizosphere soil and nonlignified soybean roots under drought conditions. Eur. Soil Sci., 47(2):102-109. DOI: 10.1134/S1064229314020057
  • Eriksen J 2009. Soil sulphur cycling in temperate agricultural system. Adv. Agron. 102: 55-89
  • Gianfreda L,, Rao M. A., Piotrowska A., Palumbo G., Colombo C. 2005. Soil enzyme activities as affected by anthropogenic alterations: intensive agricultural practices and organic pollution. Sci. Total Environ., 341: 265-279.
  • Jamal A., Fazli I.S., Ahmad S., Abdin M.Z. 2006. Interactive effect of nitrogen and sulphur on yield and quality of groungnut (Arachis hypogea L.). Korean J. Crop Sci., 51(6): 519-522.
  • Kertesz M.A., Mirleau P. 2004. The role of soil microbes in plant sulphur nutrition. J. Exp. Bot., 55: 1939-1945.
  • Kozłowska-Strawska J. 2007. Influence of plant fertilization with different sulphur compounds on the changes of soil reaction. Zesz. Probl. Post. Nauk Rol., 520: 635-639. (in Polish)
  • Kovar J.L., Grant C.A. 2011. Nutrient cycling in soils: Sulfur. Publications from USDA-ARS/ UNL Faculty. Paper 1383. available: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/usdaarsacpub/1383.
  • Lemanowicz J., Bartkowiak A. 2013. Diagnosis of the content of selected heavy metals in the soils of the Pałuki region against their enzymatic activity. Arch. Environ. Protect., 39(3): 23-32. DOI: 10.2478/aep-2013-0026
  • Lemanowicz J., Siwik-Ziomek A., Koper J. 2014. Effects of farmyard manure and nitrogen fertilizers on mobility of phosphorus and sulphur in wheat and activity of selected hydrolases in soil. Int. Agroph., 28: 49-55. DOI: 10.2478/intag-2013-0026
  • Lipiński W., Terelak H., Motowicka-Terelak T., 2003. Suggestion for liming values of sulphate sulphur content in mineral soils for fertilization advisory needs. Soil Sci. Ann., 54 (3): 79-84. (in Polish)
  • Liu E., Yan Ch., Mei X., He W., Bing S. H., Ding L., Liu Q., Liu S., Fan T. 2010. Long-term effect of chemical fertilizer, straw, and manure on soil chemical and biological properties in northwest China. Geoderma, 158: 173-180. DOI:10.1016/j.geoderma.2010.04.029
  • Majcherczak E., Kozera W., Ralcewicz M., Knapowski W. 2013. Content of total carbon andavailable forms of phosphorus, potassium and magnesium in soil depending on the sulphur rate and form. J. Elem., 18(1): 107-114. DOI: 10.5601/jelem.2013.18.1.09
  • PN-R-04023. 1996. Chemical and agricultural analysis of soil – determining the content of available phosphorus in mineral soils. Polish Standards Committee, Warsaw. (in Polish)
  • PN-ISO 10390. 1997. Chemical and agricultural analysis – determining soil pH. Polish Standards Committee, Warsaw. (in Polish)
  • Saviozzi A., Cardeli R., Cipolli S., Levi-Minzi R., Riffaldi R. 2006. Arylsulphatase activity during the S mineralization in soils amended with cattle manure and green waste. Agrochimica, 50: 231-237.
  • Scherer H.W. 2009. Sulfur in soils. J. Plant Nutr. Soil Sci., 172: 326-335.
  • Schmidt F., De Bona F.D., Silveira C.P., Monteiro F.A. 2012. Soil sulfur fractions dynamics and distribution in a tropical grass pasture amended with nitrogen and sulfur fertilizers. J. Plant Nutr. Soil Sci., 175: 60-67.
  • Sienkiewicz S., Krzebietke S., Wojnowska T., Żarczyński P., Omilian M. 2009. Effect of long-term differentiated fertilization with farmyard manure and mineral fertilizers on the content of available forms of P, K and Mg in soil. J. Elem., 14(4): 779-786.
  • Singh M., Reddy S.R., Singh V.P., Rupa T.R. 2007. Phosphorus availability to rice (Oriza sativa L.) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in a Vertisol after eight years of inorganic and organic fertilizer additions. Bioresour. Technol., 98: 1474-1481.
  • Tabatabai M.A., Bremner J.M. 1969. Use of p–nitrophenol phosphate for assay of soil phosphatase activity. Soil Biol. Bioch., 1: 301-307.
  • Tabatabai M.A., Bremner J.M. 1970. Factors affecting soil arylsulfatase activity. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. Proc., 34: 427-429.
  • Taqi A.K., Mohd M., Firoz M. 2011. Sulphur management: An agronomic and transgenic approach. J. Ind. Res. Tech., 1(2): 147-161.

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Bibliografia

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