105-8 Prediction of Soil Nitrogen Supply in Potato Fields in a Cool Humid Climate.

See more from this Division: S04 Soil Fertility & Plant Nutrition
See more from this Session: Nitrogen and Crop Production: I
Monday, November 1, 2010: 10:25 AM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 201B, Second Floor
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Jacynthe Dessureault-Rompré1, Bernie Zebarth1, David Burton2, Alex Georgallas2, Mehdi Sharifi2, Gregory Porter3, Gilles Moreau4, Yves Leclerc5 and Cynthia Grant6, (1)Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada-Potato Research Center, Fredericton, NB, Canada
(2)Nova Scotia Agric. Coll., Truro, NS, Canada
(3)5772 Deering Hall, Room 114, University of Maine, Orono, ME
(4)McCain Foods, Grand Falls, NB, Canada
(5)McCain Foods, Florenceville, NB, Canada
(6)Agriculture & Agri-Food Canada, Brandon, MB, Canada
This study evaluated different strategies for use of a simple first-order kinetic model (Nmin= N0 [1-e-kt] where N0 is potentially mineralizable N and k is the mineralization rate constant) to predict growing season soil N supply (SNS) in potato fields under cool humid climatic conditions. Direct application of the kinetic model for 0-15 cm depth significantly underestimated a field-based measure of plant available soil N supply (PASNS). Modeling strategies that considered the soil mineral N (SMN) present at the start of the growing season, or included a pool of labile mineralizable N (Pool I) not normally considered in determination of N0, performed better, but still underestimated high values of PASNS. Strategies which included a greater soil depth (0-30 cm), or which assumed that the mineralizable N pool was replenished during the growing season, overestimated PASNS. A strategy which used a higher value of k for Pool I gave the most promising results. Results of this study highlight the importance of considering both SMN and labile mineralizable N pools in predicting SNS, and suggest that it is possible to estimate growing season SNS in humid regions using simple kinetic models.
See more from this Division: S04 Soil Fertility & Plant Nutrition
See more from this Session: Nitrogen and Crop Production: I