4.7 Article

N2-fixation and residual N effect of four legume species and four companion grass species

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF AGRONOMY
卷 36, 期 1, 页码 66-74

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eja.2011.09.003

关键词

N-2-fixation; N transfer; Residual N effect; Companion species; Forage legume

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资金

  1. International Centre for Research in Organic Food Systems
  2. Danish Research Council for Technology and Production Sciences [09-062985]

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Inclusion of forage legumes in low-input forage mixtures improves herbage production and soil fertility through addition of nitrogen (N) from N-2-fixation. The impact of different grass-legume mixtures on the N contribution of the forage mixture has rarely been investigated under comparable soil and climatic conditions. We conducted a field experiment on a sandy soil at two nitrogen levels with seven two-species forage mixtures: alfalfa, bird's-foot trefoil, red clover, or white clover in mixture with perennial ryegrass, and white clover in mixture with meadow fescue, timothy, or hybrid ryegrass. We found high N-2-fixation of more than 300 kg N ha(-1) from both red clover and alfalfa even when the two mixtures received 300 kg total-N ha(-1) in cattle slurry. The addition of cattle slurry N fertilizer lowered N-2-fixation for white clover and red clover as expected, but for bird's-foot trefoil and alfalfa no changes in the proportion of N derived from N-2-fixation was observed. We conclude that the competition. for available soil N from perennial ryegrass in mixture was an important factor for the proportion of N in alfalfa, white clover, and bird's-foot trefoil obtained from N-2-fixation. White clover had a high proportion of N derived from atmosphere for all companion grasses despite significant differences in white clover proportion. Although the perennial ryegrass-alfalfa mixture in the grass phase yielded more than twice the N from N-2-fixation compared to white clover in the perennial ryegrass mixture, this did not in the following year lead to higher residual N effects of alfalfa. Both in terms of N yield in the grass phase and N yield in the subsequent spring barley red clover contributed most to the improvement of soil N fertility. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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