Mj. Connell et al., NITROGEN MINERALIZATION IN RELATION TO SITE HISTORY AND SOIL PROPERTIES FOR A RANGE OF AUSTRALIAN FOREST SOILS, Biology and fertility of soils, 20(4), 1995, pp. 213-220
Rates of N mineralization were measured in 27 forest soils encompassin
g a wide range of forest types and management treatments in south-east
Australia. Undisturbed soil columns were incubated at 20 degrees C fo
r 68 days at near field-capacity water content, and N mineralization w
as measured in 5-cm depth increments to 30 cm. The soils represented t
hree primary profile forms: gradational, uniform and duplex. They were
sampled beneath mature native Eucalyptus sp. forest and from plantati
ons of Pinus radiata of varying age (< 1 to 37 years). Several sites h
ad been fertilized, irrigated, or intercropped with lupins. The soils
ranged greatly in total soil N concentrations, C:N ratios, total P, an
d sand, silt, and clay contents. Net N mineralization for individual s
oil profiles (O - 30 cm depth) varied from 2.0 to 66.6 kg ha(-1) over
68 days, with soils from individual depths mineralizing from < 0 (immo
bilization) to 19.3 kg ha(-1) per 5 cm soil depth. Only 0.1-3.1% of th
e total N present at 0-30 cm in depth was mineralized during the incub
ation, and both the amount and the percentage of total N mineralized d
ecreased with increasing soil depth. N fertilization, addition of slas
h residues, or intercropping with lupins in the years prior to samplin
g increased N mineralization. Several years of irrigation of a sandy s
oil reduced levels of total N and C, and lowered rates of N mineraliza
tion. Considering all soil depths, the simple linear correlations betw
een soil parameters (C, N, P, C:N, C:P, N:P, coarse sand, fine sand, s
ilt, clay) and N mineralization rates were generally low (r < 0.53), b
ut these improved for total N (r = 0.82) and organic C (r = 0.79) when
the soils were grouped into primary profile forms. Prediction of fiel
d N-mineralization rates was complicated by the poor correlations betw
een soil properties and N mineralization, and temporal changes in the
pools of labile organic-N substrates in the field.