4.5 Article

Soil surfactants applied with 15N labeled urea increases bermudagrass uptake of nitrogen and reduces nitrogen leaching#

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT NUTRITION AND SOIL SCIENCE
Volume 184, Issue 3, Pages 378-387

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/jpln.201900162

Keywords

N-15 isotope labeled nitrogen; soil volumetric water content

Funding

  1. AgStone, LLC, SC
  2. Libyan Government

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The study demonstrates that applying surfactants with urea can enhance bermudagrass nitrogen uptake efficiency and reduce potential nitrogen leaching.
Background: Increasing nitrogen (N) plant uptake efficiency may result in better plant quality and growth, less N susceptible to leaching and potential contamination to surrounding environments. Soil surfactants have been documented to increase water infiltration and enhance water uniformity throughout the soil profile. Thus, applying a surfactant may increase N uptake and use efficiency. Methods: To investigate this theory, four treatments were applied to bermudagrass grown in leaching columns filled with one of three soils (sand, sandy loam, and sandy clay loam): (1) 10% alkoxylated polyols and 7% of glucoethers surfactant with N-15 labeled urea, (2) 10% oleic acid esters of block copolymer surfactant with N-15 labeled urea, (3) water with N-15 labeled urea, and (4) water without N-15 labeled urea. Ambient N-15 was determined by the no surfactant and no urea treatment. Each treatment combination was replicated five times and the greenhouse experiment was repeated. Bermudagrass quality and density, leachate volume, and volumetric water content were determined over a 28d period following application. Determination of N-15 recovery in plant, soil, and leachate occurred at experiment termination. Results: Applying either surfactant with urea resulted in significantly higher soil volumetric water content (in sandy loam and sandy clay loam soils) and higher bermudagrass clipping yield (in all soils) than urea. Surfactants applied with urea decreased percent N-15 recovery in leachate from sand by 37-46%, increased percent N-15 recovery in the sandy loam by 37%, and increased percent utilization of N-15 by bermudagrass grown in the sandy clay loam by 61-67% compared to urea applied alone. Conclusion: Applying surfactants with urea can increase bermudagrass N uptake efficiency and reduce potential N leaching.

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