Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Convention Center, Exhibit Hall BC, Second Floor
Abstract:
Nutrient availability from poultry manures can be affected by soil types and manure processing. Laboratory and greenhouse experiments were conducted to evaluate N and P availability, and liming value of poultry layer manures (fresh, composted, and pelleted) applied to surface samples of three soil series in North Carolina: Belhaven (Terric Haplosaprists), Cecil (Typic Kanhapludults), and Lynchburg (Aeric Paleaquults). A 90 d incubation compared N mineralization from manures and urea. Mean availability in the Belhaven and Lynchburg soils was 76, 73, and 55 % of total N applied in fresh, composted, and pelleted manures, respectively; whereas N availability in the Cecil soil was 41, 33, and 27% for the same manure sources. A 21 d lime incubation found liming materials in all manures just as effective in neutralizing soil acidity as equivalent amounts of CaCO3. A 21 d P incubation found similar changes in Mehlich-3 extractable soil P resulting from application of equivalent amounts of either manure or inorganic P. A greenhouse experiment evaluated millet [Urochloa ramosa (L.) T. Q. Nguyen] response to the three manures on the same soils. Plant available N from the manures followed the decreasing order of fresh > composted > pelleted, similar to the rank order obtained in the N incubation study. Application of either inorganic or manure P sources to the Belhaven muck resulted in more water soluble soil P and greater plant P uptake than when P was applied to the mineral soils.