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The Effects of Summer Green Manures on the ammonia and Nitrate Contents of soils Cropped for Winter Wheat. An Examination of the Woburn Green Manure Plots 1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

T. J. Mirchandani
Affiliation:
(Chemistry Department, Rothamsted Experimental Station, Harpenden.)

Extract

1. The Woburn field experiments on wheat after green manures are briefly reviewed. Contrary to the original expectations the wheat was less good after two summer crops of tares than after two mustard crops. This result was obtained many times and in recent years the wheat yields were extremely low after both green manures.

2. Regular soil analyses for nitrate and ammonia through 1928 and 1929 showed that the mean nitrate content was extremely low (1·2 parts of nitric nitrogen per million of soil). During the cold dry winter of 1928–9 the ammonia nitrogen was several times greater than the nitrate nitrogen.

3. Further evidence of an acute nitrogen deficiency during the critical period for the wheat plant in May and June was afforded by the large responses to top dressings of sodium nitrate both in the 1929 and the 1930 wheat crop.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1931

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References

REFERENCES

(1)Voelcker, J. A. “Ann. Rep. of Woburn Expt. Sta.,” J. Roy. Agric. Soc. 1892.Google Scholar
(2)Voelcker, J. A.Green Manuring,” Rothamsted Conferences (1927), 3, 23.Google Scholar
(3)Crowther, E. M. and Mirchandani, T. J.Agric. Sci. (1931), 21, 493.Google Scholar