Faculty of Science, School of Life and Environmental Sciences
Doi
Abstract
Soil nitrogen (N) availability is determined by microbial gross N mineralisation (GNM) and immobilisation,
where net N mineralisation (NNM) represents their balance. Plants provide a substantial amount of their photosynthesized C belowground into the soil as rhizodeposition, which can stimulate microbial activity affecting
GNM and NNM, but this activity also depends on soil N and phosphorus (P) availability. We examined how N (25
and 100 kg N ha 1 or 44 and 177 mg N pot 1) and P (10 and 40 kg P ha 1, or 18 and 71 mg P pot 1) fertilisation
affected microbial N mineralisation in soil planted with two wheat genotypes (Suntop and 249) varying in root
biomass and rhizodeposition. We used a continuous 13CO2 labelling method to track plant C rhizodeposition and
a 15N pool dilution technique to investigate GNM. We further assessed NNM by comparing N pools in plant and
soil at the start and end of the experiment. We observed increased GNM with increased P fertilisation, likely
because of P-induced N limitation stimulating microbial mining for N, particularly at the low level of N fertilisation.
N fertilisation did not affect GNM but the higher level of N fertilisation reduced NNM, likely because of
increased microbial immobilisation of fertiliser N. Our results suggest that GNM was more sensitive to soil N and
P availability than to rhizodeposition between wheat genotypes, although at high N fertilisation, rhizodeposition
contributed to reduced NNM, likely because rhizodeposition enhanced microbial N immobilisation. We conclude
that the relative availability of N and P in soil should be considered for managing GNM and NNM in soil