Litcius/Paper detail

Nitrogen fertilizer value of animal slurries with different proportions of liquid and solid fractions: A 3-year study under field conditions

Betina Nørgaard Pedersen, Bent T. Christensen, Luca Bechini, Daniele Cavalli, Jørgen Eriksen, Peter Sørensen

2020The Journal of Agricultural Science13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The plant availability of manure nitrogen (N) is influenced by manure composition in the year of application whereas some studies indicate that the legacy effect in following years is independent of the composition. The plant availability of N in pig and cattle slurries with variable contents of particulate matter was determined in a 3-year field study. We separated cattle and a pig slurry into liquid and solid fractions by centrifugation. Slurry mixtures with varying proportions of solid and liquid fraction were applied to a loamy sand soil at similar NH4+-N rates in the first year. Yields and N offtake of spring barley and undersown perennial ryegrass were compared to plots receiving mineral N fertilizer. The first year N fertilizer replacement value (NFRV) of total N in slurry mixtures decreased with increasing proportion of solid fraction. The second and third season NFRV averaged 6.5% and 3.8% of total N, respectively, for cattle slurries, and 18% and 7.5% for pig slurries and was not related to the proportion of solid fraction. The estimated net N mineralization of residual organic N increased nearly linearly with growing degree days (GDD) with a rate of 0.0058%/GDD for cattle and 0.0116%/GDD for pig slurries at 2000–5000 GDD after application. In conclusion NFRV of slurry decreased with increasing proportion of solid fraction in the first year. In the second year, NFRV of pig slurry N was significantly higher than that of cattle slurry N and unaffected by proportion between solid and liquid fraction.

Topics & Concepts

SlurryFertilizerNitrogenValue (mathematics)Nitrogen fertilizerAnimal scienceAgronomyEnvironmental scienceMathematicsChemistryBiologyEnvironmental engineeringStatisticsOrganic chemistryRuminant Nutrition and Digestive PhysiologySoil Carbon and Nitrogen DynamicsAgriculture, Soil, Plant Science