279-8Organic Orchard Floor Management Impacts On Soil Nitrogen Cycling and Tree Nitrogen Uptake.
See more from this Division: S04 Soil Fertility & Plant NutritionSee more from this Session: Nutrient Cycling and Management in High Yield Environments: Poster Presentations
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Duke Energy Convention Center, Exhibit Hall AB, Level 1
Productive capacity in organic peach orchards is dependent on effective management practices that promote the efficient cycling of nitrogen for tree uptake. Total soil nitrogen (N), monthly soil nitrate (NO3-) and ammonium (NH4+), and the natural abundance of N isotopes in peach tree leaves was measured to assess N turnover and tree N uptake among different orchard management treatments. The certified organic peach trial was initiated in 2008 at the Utah Agricultural Experimental Station, Kaysville, Utah and includes six orchard floor treatments: a living-mulch (shallow rooted alyssum) with legume alleyway (LL), living-mulch (shallow rooted alyssum) with grass alleyway (LG), straw-mulch with legume alley (NL), straw-mulch with grass alleyway (NG), tillage (TG) and weed fabric (WG). Biomass inputs from mow and blow contributed an average 225 grams of N to LL and NL treatments in 2011. Total soil N increased significantly across all treatments from 2009 to 2011, and was significantly higher in NL compared to NG and TG treatments in 2011. Soil NO3- was significantly higher in WG in 2009, whereas the LL and NL treatments were highest from 2010-2011, suggesting a cumulative effect of biomass inputs over several seasons. Soil NH4+ was non-significant between treatments. The NG and NL peach trees with straw-mulch had elevated 15N in comparison to other treatments with the same alleyway. Elevated 15N may indicate 15N depleted forms of N are immobilized by straw-mulch or microbial biomass. Significantly lower 15N enrichment in the LL treatment may result from uptake of soil N derived from N2 fixation processes. Differences in soil NO3- and tree leaf 15N abundances may be attributed to immobilization by straw-mulch or microbial biomass, legume mow and blow inputs, or the uptake of legume N exudates by alleyway tree roots, suggesting N uptake and soil N turnover is altered by orchard floor management.
See more from this Division: S04 Soil Fertility & Plant NutritionSee more from this Session: Nutrient Cycling and Management in High Yield Environments: Poster Presentations