Author:
Armstrong E. L.,Heenan D. P.,Pate J. S.,Unkovich M. J.
Abstract
Nitrogen balances of narrow leaf lupin
(Lupinus angustifolius L.), albus lupin
(L. albus L.), field pea
(Pisum sativum L.), chickpea
(Cicer arietinum L.), and barley
(Hordeum vulgare L.) sown over a range of dates were
examined in 1992 in a rotation study at Wagga Wagga, NSW. Each N budget
included assessment of dependence on fixed as opposed to soil N, peak
aboveground biomass N, and N removed as grain or returned as unharvested
aboveground crop residues. N balances of wheat sown across the plots in 1993
were assessed similarly in terms of biomass and grain yield. Yields,
N2 fixation, and crop residue N balances of the legumes
were markedly influenced by sowing time, and superior performance of lupins
over other species was related to higher biomass production and proportional
dependence on N2 fixation, together with a poorer
harvest index. Residual N balances in aboveground biomass after harvest of the
1992 crops were significantly correlated with soil mineral N at 1993 sowing
and with biomass and grain N yields of the resulting wheat crop. Best mean
fixation and grain N yield came from albus lupin. Wheat grain N yields
following the 2 lupins were some 20% greater than after fiield pea and
chickpea and 3 times greater than after barley. Net soil N balance based
solely on aboveground returns of N of legumes in 1992 through to harvest of
wheat in 1993 was least for narrow leaf lupin-wheat ( –20 kg N/ha),
followed by albus lupin-wheat ( –44), chickpea-wheat ( –74), and
field pea-wheat ( –96). Corresponding combined grain N yields
(legume+wheat) from the 4 rotations were 269, 361, 178, and 229 kg
N/ha, respectively. The barley-wheat rotation yielded a similarly computed
soil N deficit of 67 kg/ha. Data are discussed in relation to other
studies on legume-based rotations.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
54 articles.
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