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denitrification?
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Mikenesd
Posted 1/1/2016 18:58 (#5003758)
Subject: denitrification?


Clark SD

 I have been reading articles about denitrification on the web. What i found so far is that you need to have saturated soils for a period of time and warmer soil temps.for a lot of denitrification to take place, plus some nitrogen in the nitrate form in the soil.
 What i haven't found anything about is there denitrification taking place if the pore space is around 80% water. What i am after is there much denitrification going on when there still 20% air left in the soil pore compared when the soil is saturated?

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Cyfan
Posted 1/1/2016 19:33 (#5003887 - in reply to #5003758)
Subject: Maybe this will help


Central Iowa
December 18, 2015
Really, it just had to rain large amounts in December. Seems we can’t get any relief from worrying about excess rain and impacts on nitrogen (N). The questions have already begun – what about fall 2015 fertilizer and manure N applications?

A few things to consider.

It is quite hard to make an estimate of losses for such an extreme event and time of the year. Following are factors to consider that will affect loss potential, including if N was applied and if so what fertilizer product or manure source.

One, the two main N loss mechanisms are denitrification and leaching of nitrate-N (NO3--N). Because denitrification is mainly a biological process, and because soil temperatures were cold at the time of the recent rainfall (daily mean 4-inch soil temperatures the first two weeks of December averaged 35, 39, and 42ºF, at Caulmet, Boone, and Crawfordsville ISU research farms), denitrification will be very low. Leaching will be occurring because soils are not frozen. However, since the rainfall was intense, there was considerable surface runoff and water ponding into depressional areas. Thus N losses will be not be spatially uniform, and water movement is also occurring from depressional areas through tile drops instead of flow through soil. Also, remember that nitrate loss via tile drainage will be from residual soil profile nitrate-N after the corn and soybean crops, not just from fall N applications.

Two, anhydrous ammonia, the most common form of fertilizer N applied in the fall, forms ammonium (NH4+) when initially injected into soil (NH3 + H2O = NH4+ + OH–). Since ammonium is positively charged, it is held on the soil cation exchange complex (which is negatively charged) and does not leach. Also, ammonium does not get biologically converted to a gaseous form. Ammonium is therefore “stable” in wet soil conditions. Manure sources containing high percentage of ammonium-N will also have considerable N initially at application in the “stable” ammonium or organic form. Phosphorus MAP and DAP fertilizer also has N initially in the ammonium form when applied.

Three, unfortunately, ammonium is converted biologically to nitrate by the process called nitrification (2NH4+ + 3O2 = 2NO2– + 2H2O + 4H+ and 2NO2– + O2 = 2 NO3–). Since nitrification is a biological process, soil temperatures have a major role in the rate of ammonium conversion to nitrate. Time is also important as the longer ammonium is in the soil, conversion will take place if temperatures are suitable for biological activity. This is the main reason suggestions are for fall applications to be made after soils cool and continue to get colder. The commonly suggested temperature is 50ºF and colder. Nitrification does not stop at 50ºF, but slows considerably below that temperature and therefore if there are not a lot of days slightly below 50ºF, the amount of nitrification in the fall will be small. All ammonium, no matter the source, will nitrify. However, anhydrous ammonia will nitrify slower than other fertilizer or manure N sources because the anhydrous ammonia injection by itself initially retards nitrification.

Four, the most important consideration in estimation of potential nitrate loss with the recent large rainfall is how much of applied ammonium has converted to nitrate. If fall applications were made following the suggestion of <50ºF and the colder the better, then the amount of nitrate formed will be low and loss low. Conversely, if applications were made in early fall with warm soil temperatures and many days for nitrification to occur, then large amounts of nitrate could be formed. This means that earlier fall (September, October) applications will be much more at risk of loss than late fall (late November, early December) applications. However, earlier fall applications would not have all applied N converted to nitrate, just a greater fraction. As an example, in a study across three years (2011-2013, ISU Agricultural Engineering/Agronomy Farm, Boone), with application of liquid swine manure on Oct. 1 and Nov. 1 and soil sampling the injection band in late Nov. to early Dec., there was an average 137 ppm ammonium-N with the Nov. 1 application and 37 ppm ammonium-N with the Oct. 1 application. Time until cold soils will be important. Following are two-week (first two weeks and last two weeks of the month) average 4-inch soil temperatures (mid-October, end-October, mid-November, end-November, and mid-December respectively: Caulmet – 60, 52, 46, 38, 35; Boone – 59, 52, 48, 40, 39; Crawfordsville – 62, 54, 50, 43, 42ºF. You can see that soil temperatures did not get into the <50ºF range until early to mid-November depending on location in the state.

Five, effective nitrification inhibitors will help, but research has shown that nitrification is not stopped with an inhibitor, but slowed. Again, later fall application with cold soils and more recent application relative to the time of the high rainfall will help due to less nitrate formation.

Summary thoughts.

Nitrogen fertilizer or manure applications within the past couple of weeks or so should not have an issue with nitrate loss. Applications earlier in the fall will, and the earlier in the fall the greater the risk. One should not make a blanket assessment that all fall N applications have equal N losses or all applied N is gone. It is also too early to make decisions about adding more N in the spring. More prudently will be to evaluate specific situations and see how weather conditions develop next year. With soil profile moisture recharged, there is the potential for excessively wet soil conditions next spring, and that would have a greater impact on N loss than wet soils this fall.

ICM News
Category: Soil Fertility
Crop:
Corn
Tags: estimating nitrogen lossnitrogen leachingsoil nitrogennitrificationdenitrification
Author:

John Sawyer Professor

Dr. John Sawyer is a professor of agronomy and extension specialist in soil fertility and nutrient management at Iowa State University. His extension program involves soil fertility management, efficient crop nutrient utilization, and environmentally sound fertilizer and manure systems. Dr. Sawye...
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Mikenesd
Posted 1/1/2016 20:46 (#5004119 - in reply to #5003887)
Subject: RE: Maybe this will help


Clark SD
Thanks Cyfan, that was a good read, it had answers to some other things that i was wondering about.
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NE Ridger
Posted 1/1/2016 20:21 (#5004035 - in reply to #5003758)
Subject: RE: denitrification?


EC Nebraska
Denitrification kicks in when soil bacteria start using NO3 as a source of oxygen instead of O2. As long as there is sufficient O2 in the soil, it gets used first. So it just depends on how much O2 is available in the soil. Cold water can hold quite a bit of O2 so I doubt there would be much if any denitrification going on in cold soils at field capacity.

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Mikenesd
Posted 1/1/2016 20:41 (#5004105 - in reply to #5004035)
Subject: RE: denitrification?


Clark SD

NE Ridger - 1/1/2016 19:21

Denitrification kicks in when soil bacteria start using NO3 as a source of oxygen instead of O2. As long as there is sufficient O2 in the soil, it gets used first. So it just depends on how much O2 is available in the soil. Cold water can hold quite a bit of O2 so I doubt there would be much if any denitrification going on in cold soils at field capacity.


 Paul, thanks.
 Would there be much  denitrification going on in warmer soils at field capacity. in your opinion, if the soil temperature was around 70 degrees F.

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jbgruver
Posted 1/1/2016 21:47 (#5004270 - in reply to #5004105)
Subject: RE: denitrification?



Denitrification is a decomposition process that occurs under low O2 conditions.

When recognized as a decomposition process, it is obvious that the amount of easily decomposable organic matter in soil is a critical factor controlling denitrification rates.

Easily decomposable organic matter actually plays 2 important roles.

1) It promotes low oxygen conditions in soil by creating high biological oxygen demand i.e., aerobic microbes rapidly consume easily decomposable OM which results in rapid consumption of oxygen. In wet soils, oxygen replenishment is slow because diffusion of oxygen through water filled pores is much slower than through air filled pores.

2) anaerobic microbes eat easily decomposable OM and nitrate is consumed in place of oxygen

So why is oxygen consumed during aerobic decomposition and nitrate consumed during anaerobic decomposition?

In well aerated soils (i.e., soil pores with > ~10% oxygen), the chemistry of decomposition consists primarily of carbon atoms getting oxidized (i.e., giving up electrons) and oxygen atoms getting reduced (i.e., receiving the electrons given up by carbon atoms)

In poorly aerated soils, the chemistry of decomposition consists primarily of carbon atoms getting oxidized and nitrogen atoms getting reduced (i.e., receiving the electrons given up by carbon atoms).

Nitrogen atoms that are more oxidized (i.e., more depleted of electrons) are more inclined to receive electrons and the N atoms in nitrate are fully oxidized (i.e., they have given up all of their outer shell electrons) so the N atoms in nitrate ions become the main recipients of available electrons when oxygen supply is low.

Decomposition is faster at higher temps (~ 2x faster with each 10 degree celsius increase) so denitrification is faster.

For more info check out the document at the following link:
https://soils.ifas.ufl.edu/wetlands/publications/PDF-articles/283.An...

Joel
WIU Agriculture
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Mikenesd
Posted 1/1/2016 22:27 (#5004365 - in reply to #5004270)
Subject: RE: denitrification?


Clark SD
Thanks Joel, its going to take me a while to digest that, but i will keep after it.
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NE Ridger
Posted 1/1/2016 22:07 (#5004327 - in reply to #5004105)
Subject: RE: denitrification?


EC Nebraska
I'll certainly defer to Prof Gruver on that question. ;)


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jbgruver
Posted 1/2/2016 07:07 (#5004636 - in reply to #5003758)
Subject: RE: denitrification?



Sorry if my message last night came out sounding like mumbo jumbo. I was in the last stages of a 12 hour train ride. Denitrification can occur in soils with 20% air filled pores W H E N oxygen consumption is occurring faster than replenishment. One possibility is a warm high clay soil that has received an application of manure slurry. The denitrification would occur in micropores that have been depleted of oxygen but contain enough easily decomposable OM and nitrate for denitrification to proceed.

Joel
WIU Agriculture
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Mikenesd
Posted 1/2/2016 08:52 (#5004846 - in reply to #5004636)
Subject: RE: denitrification?


Clark SD

jbgruver - 1/2/2016 06:07

Sorry if my message last night came out sounding like mumbo jumbo. I was in the last stages of a 12 hour train ride. Denitrification can occur in soils with 20% air filled pores W H E N oxygen consumption is occurring faster than replenishment. One possibility is a warm high clay soil that has received an application of manure slurry. The denitrification would occur in micropores that have been depleted of oxygen but contain enough easily decomposable OM and nitrate for denitrification to proceed.

Joel
WIU Agriculture

 Joel, not a problem.
  The field where i came up with the 80% water filled pore space was planted to soybeans in 2015, The previous crop was rye harvested for grain in 2014, The last nitrogen applied was late may of 2014. This is long term no-till. So i am guessing that there was not much nitrate to denitrify in the first place bcause of the n being tied up in the rye straw, and according to the soil survey the clay content is about 30%.
 Do you agree with my assumption?
 Thanks
 Mike

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jbgruver
Posted 1/2/2016 08:58 (#5004863 - in reply to #5004846)
Subject: RE: denitrification?



Makes sense to me. What sparked your interest in denitrification?

Joel
WIU Agriculture
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Mikenesd
Posted 1/2/2016 09:21 (#5004910 - in reply to #5004863)
Subject: RE: denitrification?


Clark SD

 It started when i made a reply to bad farmers post "how much water can your soil hold"
 http://talk.newagtalk.com/forums/thread-view.asp?tid=601219&mid=4996766#M4996766
  I got a email from someone that read that thread, that asked me if that would cause some denitrification. I really did not have a answer for him, so i wanted to find out more about it.

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Busted Knuckles
Posted 1/3/2016 07:25 (#5006885 - in reply to #5003758)
Subject: RE: denitrification?


Southeast Minnesota
Marking post.
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