C.F. Drury, W.D. Reynolds, G.W. Parkin, J.D. Lauzon, J.K. Saso, T.Q. Zhang, X.M. Yang, C.S. Tan, K. Liu, W. Calder, T.O. Oloya, T.W. Welacky, D.K. Reid
Canadian Journal of Soil Science 96 (2), 122-135, (12 April 2016) https://doi.org/10.1139/cjss-2015-0070
KEYWORDS: chloride tracer, nitrogen index, nitrate leaching, hydrologic soil group, saturated hydraulic conductivity, traceur de chlorure, indice d'azote, lixiviation des nitrates, groupe hydrologique du sol, conductivité hydraulique au point de saturation
Nitrogen (N) leaching from soil into surface and ground waters is a concern in humid areas of Canada. As a result, N management protocols, including the Ontario N Index, are widely used to identify N leaching risk, although field assessment remains limited. Nitrogen fertilizer and chloride (Cl) tracer were fall-applied to five agricultural soils in Ontario with different textures and hydrologic soil groups (HSG) to assess the Ontario N Index and characterize inorganic N movement over 1 yr. The treatments included three N rates (0, 100, and 200 kg N ha-1) plus Cl tracer and 200 kg N ha-1 rate without Cl. After spring thaw, N loss from the crop root zone (top 60 cm) ranged from 68% for Brookston clay loam to 99% for Harrow sandy loam. A strong linear relationship between apparent N recovery and apparent Cl recovery indicated that N loss from the root zone occurred primarily by downward leaching. Leaching was controlled by the minimum measured saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ksat), and good estimates of N leaching were obtained using a quasi-theoretical relationship between N loss and Ksat. We concluded that Ontario N Index estimates of N leaching risk might be improved by including site-specific measurements of Ksat.