245-1 Nitrogen Fertilizer Effects On Soil Mineralogy in An Agroecosystem.

See more from this Division: S09 Soil Mineralogy
See more from this Session: Symposium--Soil Minerals in Natural and Agroecosystems: II
Tuesday, November 2, 2010: 8:25 AM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202C, Second Floor

Christopher Matocha, John Grove and Anastasios Karathanasis, Plant and Soil Science, Univ. of Kentucky, Lexington, KY
Nitrogen (N) fertilizer inputs are necessary for crop production in no-till agroecosystems.  Past studies have noted changes in basic soil properties at the soil surface as N fertilizer rates increase under no-till management.  However, the impact of N fertilizer rates on soil mineralogy is unclear.  This study was conducted to examine mineralogy of clay fractions  from surface soil samples under long-term, no-till management subjected to various ammonium nitrate fertilizer rates (0, 168, and 336 kg N/ha yr).  The mineralogy in the control plots (0 kg N/ha yr) consisted of hydroxy-interlayered vermiculite (HIV), illite (IL), kaolinite, quartz, and a mixed-layer mineral.  There was a significant decrease in the integrated peak areas for HIV and IL as applied N fertilizer increased to 168 and 336 kg N/ha yr (p<0.01).  Furthermore, the HIV peak at 1.4 nm failed to collapse upon potassium saturation and heating to 550 degrees Celsius in the 168 and 336 kg N/ha yr treatments.  Persistence of the 1.4 nm peak indicates the presence of an aluminum chlorite-like mineral unique to the clay fraction of soil under these treatments.  This change in soil mineralogy with increasing N fertilizer addition is due, in part, to soil acidification because aluminum chlorite is known to form under acidic conditions and this site has a history of soil acidification.  These results underscore the need to monitor soil minerals in agroecosystems subject to N fertilizer inputs.