Title of article :
Potential nitrogen mineralization, plant utilization efficiency and soil CO2 emissions following the addition of anaerobic digested slurries
Author/Authors :
Marco Grigatti، نويسنده , , Marco and Di Girolamo، نويسنده , , Giuseppe and Chincarini، نويسنده , , Riccardo and Ciavatta، نويسنده , , Claudio and Barbanti، نويسنده , , Lorenzo، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
11
From page :
4619
To page :
4629
Abstract :
The liquid (LS) and solid fraction (SS) of a biogas slurry from dedicated crops, the composted solid fraction (CSS) and a municipal solid waste compost (MSWC) were compared in a soil incubation at 200 mg N kg−1, to assess CO2 emissions and potential C and N mineralization. Products were also compared for nitrogen apparent recovery fraction (ARF) in a pot trial with Italian ryegrass. LS showed the highest C mineralization (63.6%), soil mineral N (>100 mg kg−1), and ARF (50.3%). SS showed 21.6% C mineralization, slight N immobilization (23.6 mg kg−1) and 7.3% ARF. In CSS, a 5.1% C mineralization in soil added to 26.3% C loss during composting, resulting in 31.4% overall C loss. Moreover, composting SS to CSS curbed the emission from 4210 to 1100 mg CO2 kg−1 soil, still double than the reference MSWC (507 mg CO2 kg−1 soil). Despite high mineralization of supplied carbon, LS emitted less CO2 than SS: 936 mg CO2 kg−1 soil. It appears, therefore, that LS acts as a source of easily available nitrogen, while SS plays the role of an amendment with some limitations due to soil N immobilization. CSS mitigates N immobilization, but the composting process determines relevant CO2 losses to the atmosphere.
Keywords :
Net N mineralization , N recovery , Soil mineral nitrogen , Biogas-reactor effluent , Italian ryegrass , Anaerobic digestion
Journal title :
Biomass and Bioenergy
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Biomass and Bioenergy
Record number :
1915176
Link To Document :
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