H. Nimenya et al., Effects of wheat straw and spruce sawdust on the decaying of urinary nitrogen in the presence of urease., ANN MED VET, 143(6), 1999, pp. 409-414
The fate of urinary nitrogen from cattle urine has been carried out during
7 days by measuring daily the concentration of ammonium and nitrate. The pH
has been also performed.
The experiments were conducted into polyethylene bags (1l, each) containing
a buffered aqueous solution (pH 7.50), with 2 ml/l of cat tie urine and 20
IU/I of urease. This solution was allocated into 4 trials (S1; S2; S3; S4)
splited in triplicate. The bags were placed into water bath maintained at
24-26 degrees C and continuously aerated. Nitrifying bacteria were added to
the bags of 3 of 4 groups and wheat straw (10 g/l) or spruce sawdust (10 g
/l) has been added to 2 of these groups.
The solution with urine + urease (S1) showed a rapid increase of the concen
tration of ammonium after one day, and remained constant throughout the exp
erimental period. Moreover, no nitrate accumulation was observed. The solut
ion with urine + urease + nitrifying bacteria (S2) also induced an increase
of the concentration of ammonium, followed, after one day, by a decrease o
f ammonium concentration with increasing of nitrate concentration. No consi
stent increase in ammonium and nitrate concentrations was found when the so
lution was incubated with wheat straw (S3). In contrast, the solution with
spruce (S4) induced an increase of ammonium and nitrate concentrations. How
ever, the rate of nitrate formation from S4 remained lower than that observ
ed with S2.
The nitrate formation recorded in trials S2 and S4 induced a decrease of pH
significantly different from the pH values measured in the trials SI and S
3.
The results of the investigation suggested that wheat straw had a high capa
city for binding of ammonium. Consequently, nitrification process could not
be expected. With spruce sawdust, a slight but significant inhibition of u
rea hydrolysis and of the nitrification process was observed.