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Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics, and CO(2) Efflux in the Calcareous Sandy Loam Soil Treated with Chemically Modified Organic Amendments

In Saudi Arabia, more than 335,000 tons of cow manure is produced every year from dairy farming. However, the produced cow manure is usually added to the agricultural soils as raw or composted manure; significant nitrogen losses occur during the storage, handling, and application of the raw manure....

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Autores principales: Mohammed-Nour, Ahmed, Al-Sewailem, Mohamed, El-Naggar, Ahmed H., El-Saeid, Mohamed H., Aly, Anwar A., Elfaki, Jamal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8398802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34443295
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26164707
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author Mohammed-Nour, Ahmed
Al-Sewailem, Mohamed
El-Naggar, Ahmed H.
El-Saeid, Mohamed H.
Aly, Anwar A.
Elfaki, Jamal
author_facet Mohammed-Nour, Ahmed
Al-Sewailem, Mohamed
El-Naggar, Ahmed H.
El-Saeid, Mohamed H.
Aly, Anwar A.
Elfaki, Jamal
author_sort Mohammed-Nour, Ahmed
collection PubMed
description In Saudi Arabia, more than 335,000 tons of cow manure is produced every year from dairy farming. However, the produced cow manure is usually added to the agricultural soils as raw or composted manure; significant nitrogen losses occur during the storage, handling, and application of the raw manure. The recovery of ammonia from cow manure through thermochemical treatments is a promising technique to obtain concentrated nitrogen fertilizer and reducing nitrogen losses from raw manure. However, the byproduct effluents from the recovery process are characterized by different chemical properties from the original raw manure; thus, its impact as soil amendments on the soil carbon and nitrogen dynamics is unknown. Therefore, a 90-day incubation experiment was conducted to study the impact of these effluents on CO(2) efflux, organic C, microbial biomass C, available NH(4)(+), and NO(3)(−) when added to agricultural soil. In addition to the two types of effluents (produced at pH 9 and pH 12), raw cow manure (CM), composted cow manure (CMC), cow manure biochar (CMB), and control were used for comparison. The application of CM resulted in a considerable increase in soil available nitrogen and CO(2) efflux, compared to other treatments. Cow manure biochar showed the lowest CO(2) efflux. Cumulative CO(2) effluxes of cow manure effluents were lower than CM; this is possibly due to the relatively high C:N ratio of manure effluent. The content of P, Fe, Cu, Zn, and Mn decreased as incubation time increased. Soil microbial biomass C for soil treated with cow manure effluents (pH 12 and 7) was significantly higher than the rest of the soil amendments and control.
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spelling pubmed-83988022021-08-29 Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics, and CO(2) Efflux in the Calcareous Sandy Loam Soil Treated with Chemically Modified Organic Amendments Mohammed-Nour, Ahmed Al-Sewailem, Mohamed El-Naggar, Ahmed H. El-Saeid, Mohamed H. Aly, Anwar A. Elfaki, Jamal Molecules Article In Saudi Arabia, more than 335,000 tons of cow manure is produced every year from dairy farming. However, the produced cow manure is usually added to the agricultural soils as raw or composted manure; significant nitrogen losses occur during the storage, handling, and application of the raw manure. The recovery of ammonia from cow manure through thermochemical treatments is a promising technique to obtain concentrated nitrogen fertilizer and reducing nitrogen losses from raw manure. However, the byproduct effluents from the recovery process are characterized by different chemical properties from the original raw manure; thus, its impact as soil amendments on the soil carbon and nitrogen dynamics is unknown. Therefore, a 90-day incubation experiment was conducted to study the impact of these effluents on CO(2) efflux, organic C, microbial biomass C, available NH(4)(+), and NO(3)(−) when added to agricultural soil. In addition to the two types of effluents (produced at pH 9 and pH 12), raw cow manure (CM), composted cow manure (CMC), cow manure biochar (CMB), and control were used for comparison. The application of CM resulted in a considerable increase in soil available nitrogen and CO(2) efflux, compared to other treatments. Cow manure biochar showed the lowest CO(2) efflux. Cumulative CO(2) effluxes of cow manure effluents were lower than CM; this is possibly due to the relatively high C:N ratio of manure effluent. The content of P, Fe, Cu, Zn, and Mn decreased as incubation time increased. Soil microbial biomass C for soil treated with cow manure effluents (pH 12 and 7) was significantly higher than the rest of the soil amendments and control. MDPI 2021-08-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8398802/ /pubmed/34443295 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26164707 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mohammed-Nour, Ahmed
Al-Sewailem, Mohamed
El-Naggar, Ahmed H.
El-Saeid, Mohamed H.
Aly, Anwar A.
Elfaki, Jamal
Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics, and CO(2) Efflux in the Calcareous Sandy Loam Soil Treated with Chemically Modified Organic Amendments
title Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics, and CO(2) Efflux in the Calcareous Sandy Loam Soil Treated with Chemically Modified Organic Amendments
title_full Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics, and CO(2) Efflux in the Calcareous Sandy Loam Soil Treated with Chemically Modified Organic Amendments
title_fullStr Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics, and CO(2) Efflux in the Calcareous Sandy Loam Soil Treated with Chemically Modified Organic Amendments
title_full_unstemmed Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics, and CO(2) Efflux in the Calcareous Sandy Loam Soil Treated with Chemically Modified Organic Amendments
title_short Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics, and CO(2) Efflux in the Calcareous Sandy Loam Soil Treated with Chemically Modified Organic Amendments
title_sort carbon and nitrogen dynamics, and co(2) efflux in the calcareous sandy loam soil treated with chemically modified organic amendments
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8398802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34443295
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26164707
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