271-2 Measurement and Simulation of Ammonia Volatilization From Urea Fertilizer in Cropping and Pasture System.

See more from this Division: A05 Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Nutrient Management and Environmental Quality
Wednesday, November 3, 2010: 1:20 PM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 201B, Second Floor
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Deli Chen, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, Debra Turner, University of Melbourne, Preston, VIC, AUSTRALIA, Yong Li, The University Of Melbourne, University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, AUSTRALIA, Owen Denmead, CSIRO, Canberra, ACT, AUSTRALIA and John Freney, CSIRO, Campbell, ACT, AUSTRALIA
Ammonia (NH3) volatilization is an important pathway in soil N cycling and often responsible for the low efficiency of N fertilizer in plant-soil systems.  The NH3 volatilization is strongly influenced by soil and climatic factors and management practices. The quantifying NH3 volatilization is a technically challenge and costly exercise.

We present the NH3 volatilization losses from the field experiments after the nitrogen fertilizer application in wheat, maize and pasture systems in Australia and China under different soil and climate conditions and management practices. The NH3 volatilizations were measured by micrometrological methods of full profile (mass balance), gradient fluxes and the recently developed technique of open path laser/FTIR- Lagrangian model of atmospheric dispersion.  

NH3 volatilization accounts up to up to 50% total N applied to alkaline in the North China Plain, up to 20% in the acidic pasture soils in Australia. The fertilizer application and irrigation methods strongly influence the NH3 volatilization as well as soil and climate conditions.  Green urea, a commercial product containing NBPT as a urease inhibitor, was effective in reducing the NH3 volatilisation (up to 90% less) when applied to wheat crop and pasture by surface broadcasting.   

A NH3 volatilization sub-model was developed under the simulation framework of Water and Nitrogen Management Model (WNMM). A unique feature of this simulation component is the introduction of fertilizer N distribution function in soils for different applying methods, surface broadcasting, surface broadcasting followed by irrigation and deep placement. This sub-model calculates ammonia volatilization from surface and subsurface soil separately. For the surface layer, ammonia volatilization is controlled by soil temperature and wind speed, while for the subsurface soil layer, it is regulated by soil temperature, soil moisture, CEC and depth. The effect of localized pH surrounding urea granules and urine patches due to urea hydrolysis has been simulated, which is the main cause of NH3 volatilization in acidic soils.  The model also incorporate the effect of urease inhibitor.

See more from this Division: A05 Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Nutrient Management and Environmental Quality