Impact of residue quality on the C and N mineralization of leaf and root residues of three agroforestry species

A laboratory incubation experiment with 15N labeled root and leaf residues of 3 agroforestry species (Leucaena leucocephala, Dactyladenia harto'i and Flemingia macrophylla) was conducted under controlled conditions (25 °C) for 56 days to quantify residue C and N mineralization and its relationship with residue quality. No uniform relation was found between the chemical composition of the above and below residues. The leucaena and dactyladenia roots contained more lignin (8 and 26% respectively) and less N (2.0 and 1.0% respectively) than the respective leaves (2 and 13% lignin and 2.9 and 1.4% N, respectively), whereas the differences between the lignin and N contents of the flemingia leaves and roots were not significant (4.6 and 3.0% lignin and 2.63 and 2.68% N, respectively). The leucaena leaves contained more polyphenols than the roots (6.4 and 3.6%), while the polyphenol content of the leaves and roots of the other residues was similar (5.0 and 5.1 % for dactyladenia and 4.0 and 3.5% for flemingia). Three patterns of N mineralization could be distinguished. A first pattern, followed by residues producing the highest amounts of CO2, showed an initial immobilization of soil derived N, followed by a net release of both soil and residue derived N after 7 days of incubation. A second pattern, followed by the flemingia leaf residues which produced intermediate amounts of CO2 and had an intermediate quality, showed no significant immobilization of soil derived N, and significant mineralization of residue N. A third pattern, followed by both low quality dactyladenia residues, showed a low release of residue derived N and a continued inmobilization of soil derived N. Residue C mineralization was significantly (p < 0.05) correlated with the residue lignin content, C-to-N ratio, and polyphenol-to-N ratio. The proportion of residue N mineralized (immobilized) after 56 days of incubation was significantly correlated with the residue N content (p < 0.01) and the C-to-N ratio (p < 0.05). The relations were quadratic, rather than linear. The ratio of the proportion of residue N mineralized (immobilized) over the proportion of residue C mineralized after 56 days was highly significantly correlated with the lignin content (p < 0.01 ) and C-to-N (p < 0.001), lignin-to-N (p < 0.01), polyphenol-to-N (p < 0.01) and (lignin+polyphenol)-to-N ratios (p < 0.0 I) in a linear way. This indicates that due to the low availability of the residue C, relatively less N is immobilized for the very low quality residues ((lignin+polyphenol)-to-N ratio: 29.7) than for the residues with a relatively higher quality ((lignin+polyphenol)-to-N ratios between 3.3 and 12.5).

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Main Authors: Vanlauwe, Bernard, Nwoke, O.C., Sanginga, N., Merckx, R.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1996
Subjects:leucaena leucocephala, polyphenols, mineral fertilizers,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101014
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1010142023-02-15T07:07:06Z Impact of residue quality on the C and N mineralization of leaf and root residues of three agroforestry species Vanlauwe, Bernard Nwoke, O.C. Sanginga, N. Merckx, R. leucaena leucocephala polyphenols mineral fertilizers A laboratory incubation experiment with 15N labeled root and leaf residues of 3 agroforestry species (Leucaena leucocephala, Dactyladenia harto'i and Flemingia macrophylla) was conducted under controlled conditions (25 °C) for 56 days to quantify residue C and N mineralization and its relationship with residue quality. No uniform relation was found between the chemical composition of the above and below residues. The leucaena and dactyladenia roots contained more lignin (8 and 26% respectively) and less N (2.0 and 1.0% respectively) than the respective leaves (2 and 13% lignin and 2.9 and 1.4% N, respectively), whereas the differences between the lignin and N contents of the flemingia leaves and roots were not significant (4.6 and 3.0% lignin and 2.63 and 2.68% N, respectively). The leucaena leaves contained more polyphenols than the roots (6.4 and 3.6%), while the polyphenol content of the leaves and roots of the other residues was similar (5.0 and 5.1 % for dactyladenia and 4.0 and 3.5% for flemingia). Three patterns of N mineralization could be distinguished. A first pattern, followed by residues producing the highest amounts of CO2, showed an initial immobilization of soil derived N, followed by a net release of both soil and residue derived N after 7 days of incubation. A second pattern, followed by the flemingia leaf residues which produced intermediate amounts of CO2 and had an intermediate quality, showed no significant immobilization of soil derived N, and significant mineralization of residue N. A third pattern, followed by both low quality dactyladenia residues, showed a low release of residue derived N and a continued inmobilization of soil derived N. Residue C mineralization was significantly (p < 0.05) correlated with the residue lignin content, C-to-N ratio, and polyphenol-to-N ratio. The proportion of residue N mineralized (immobilized) after 56 days of incubation was significantly correlated with the residue N content (p < 0.01) and the C-to-N ratio (p < 0.05). The relations were quadratic, rather than linear. The ratio of the proportion of residue N mineralized (immobilized) over the proportion of residue C mineralized after 56 days was highly significantly correlated with the lignin content (p < 0.01 ) and C-to-N (p < 0.001), lignin-to-N (p < 0.01), polyphenol-to-N (p < 0.01) and (lignin+polyphenol)-to-N ratios (p < 0.0 I) in a linear way. This indicates that due to the low availability of the residue C, relatively less N is immobilized for the very low quality residues ((lignin+polyphenol)-to-N ratio: 29.7) than for the residues with a relatively higher quality ((lignin+polyphenol)-to-N ratios between 3.3 and 12.5). 1996 2019-04-24T12:29:44Z 2019-04-24T12:29:44Z Journal Article Vanlauwe, B., Nwoke, O.C., Sanginga, N. & Merckx, R. (1996). Impact of residue quality on the C and N mineralization of leaf and root residues of three agroforestry species. Plant and Soil, 183(2), 221-231. 0032-079X https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101014 en Limited Access
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic leucaena leucocephala
polyphenols
mineral fertilizers
leucaena leucocephala
polyphenols
mineral fertilizers
spellingShingle leucaena leucocephala
polyphenols
mineral fertilizers
leucaena leucocephala
polyphenols
mineral fertilizers
Vanlauwe, Bernard
Nwoke, O.C.
Sanginga, N.
Merckx, R.
Impact of residue quality on the C and N mineralization of leaf and root residues of three agroforestry species
description A laboratory incubation experiment with 15N labeled root and leaf residues of 3 agroforestry species (Leucaena leucocephala, Dactyladenia harto'i and Flemingia macrophylla) was conducted under controlled conditions (25 °C) for 56 days to quantify residue C and N mineralization and its relationship with residue quality. No uniform relation was found between the chemical composition of the above and below residues. The leucaena and dactyladenia roots contained more lignin (8 and 26% respectively) and less N (2.0 and 1.0% respectively) than the respective leaves (2 and 13% lignin and 2.9 and 1.4% N, respectively), whereas the differences between the lignin and N contents of the flemingia leaves and roots were not significant (4.6 and 3.0% lignin and 2.63 and 2.68% N, respectively). The leucaena leaves contained more polyphenols than the roots (6.4 and 3.6%), while the polyphenol content of the leaves and roots of the other residues was similar (5.0 and 5.1 % for dactyladenia and 4.0 and 3.5% for flemingia). Three patterns of N mineralization could be distinguished. A first pattern, followed by residues producing the highest amounts of CO2, showed an initial immobilization of soil derived N, followed by a net release of both soil and residue derived N after 7 days of incubation. A second pattern, followed by the flemingia leaf residues which produced intermediate amounts of CO2 and had an intermediate quality, showed no significant immobilization of soil derived N, and significant mineralization of residue N. A third pattern, followed by both low quality dactyladenia residues, showed a low release of residue derived N and a continued inmobilization of soil derived N. Residue C mineralization was significantly (p < 0.05) correlated with the residue lignin content, C-to-N ratio, and polyphenol-to-N ratio. The proportion of residue N mineralized (immobilized) after 56 days of incubation was significantly correlated with the residue N content (p < 0.01) and the C-to-N ratio (p < 0.05). The relations were quadratic, rather than linear. The ratio of the proportion of residue N mineralized (immobilized) over the proportion of residue C mineralized after 56 days was highly significantly correlated with the lignin content (p < 0.01 ) and C-to-N (p < 0.001), lignin-to-N (p < 0.01), polyphenol-to-N (p < 0.01) and (lignin+polyphenol)-to-N ratios (p < 0.0 I) in a linear way. This indicates that due to the low availability of the residue C, relatively less N is immobilized for the very low quality residues ((lignin+polyphenol)-to-N ratio: 29.7) than for the residues with a relatively higher quality ((lignin+polyphenol)-to-N ratios between 3.3 and 12.5).
format Journal Article
topic_facet leucaena leucocephala
polyphenols
mineral fertilizers
author Vanlauwe, Bernard
Nwoke, O.C.
Sanginga, N.
Merckx, R.
author_facet Vanlauwe, Bernard
Nwoke, O.C.
Sanginga, N.
Merckx, R.
author_sort Vanlauwe, Bernard
title Impact of residue quality on the C and N mineralization of leaf and root residues of three agroforestry species
title_short Impact of residue quality on the C and N mineralization of leaf and root residues of three agroforestry species
title_full Impact of residue quality on the C and N mineralization of leaf and root residues of three agroforestry species
title_fullStr Impact of residue quality on the C and N mineralization of leaf and root residues of three agroforestry species
title_full_unstemmed Impact of residue quality on the C and N mineralization of leaf and root residues of three agroforestry species
title_sort impact of residue quality on the c and n mineralization of leaf and root residues of three agroforestry species
publishDate 1996
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101014
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AT sangingan impactofresiduequalityonthecandnmineralizationofleafandrootresiduesofthreeagroforestryspecies
AT merckxr impactofresiduequalityonthecandnmineralizationofleafandrootresiduesofthreeagroforestryspecies
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