• Title/Summary/Keyword: Minerlaization

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Nitrogen Mineralization and Nitrification of Selected Piedmont Soils in North Carolina (Piedmont토양(土壤)에서의 질소(窒素) 무기화(無機化) 및 질산화작용(窒酸化作用) 특성(特性))

  • Shin, Joung-Du;Reddy, G.B.
    • Korean Journal of Soil Science and Fertilizer
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    • v.30 no.1
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    • pp.23-28
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    • 1997
  • A better understanding of nitrogen transformations in soils is essential to increase fertilizer nitrogen use efficiency. A laboratory incubation study was conducted to determine net mineralization and nitrification in selected Piedmont soils. Net mineralization and nitrification increased up to 60 days in the surface layers of Enon, Mecklenburg and Chewacla. After 60 days both processes declined up to 90 days incubation. In Wehadkee, mineralization and nitrification did not differ with incubation time. In all subsurface layers, mineralization and nitrification increased with time up to 90 days. Mineralization and nitrification differed among soils in surface and subsurface layers. These differences might be influenced by soil type related to amount of mineralization, soil aeration and nitrifying bacterial populations. A mineralization and nitrification was greater in surface layers than in subsurface layers.

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Rates and Pathways of Anaerobic Mineralization of Organic Matter at Highly Stagnant Freshwater Wetland and Its Comparison to Frequently Flushed Coastal Wetland (정체된 시화 인공습지와 해수유통이 활발한 강화 갯벌에서의 혐기성 유기물 분해능 및 분해경로 비교)

  • Kim, Sung-Han;Mok, Jin Sook;Jeong, Jeong Ho;Chang, Yoon Young;Choi, Kwang Soon;Hyun, Jung-Ho
    • Journal of Wetlands Research
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.1-11
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    • 2007
  • The objectives of this study are: (1) to compare the rates and pathways of organic matter minerlaization at stagnant freshwater wetland in Shiwha to highly irrigated coastal wetland in Ganghwa; and (2) to discuss the significance of irrigation into the sediment in controlling the organic carbon oxidation in Shiwha wetland. Concentrations of $CO_2$, $NH_4{^+}$ and $H_2S$ in the pore water of the Shiwha wetland were 3 times, 30 times, and 3 times higher than that in the pore water of the Ganghwa wetland, respectively. The ratio of Fe(III) to total reduced sulfur at the Ganghwa wetland was 12 times higher than at the Shiwha wetland. The results indicated that the Ganghwa wetland with frequent tidal inundation were relatively oxidized than highly stagnant Shiwha wetland. Rates of organic matter oxidation at the Ganghwa wetland ($0.039mM\;C\;h{-1}$) was 390 times higher than that at the Shiwha wetland ($0.0001mM\;C\;h{-1}$). Rates of sulfate reduction at the Shiwha wetland ($314{\sim}580nmol\;cm^{-3}\;d{-1}$) were comparable to the sulfate reduction at Ganghwa wetland ($2{\sim}769nmol\;cm^{-3}\; d{-1}$), whereas Fe(III) reduction rates were 1.7 times higher at the Ganghwa wetland ($0.1368{\mu}mol\;cm^{-3}\;d{-1}$) than at the Shiwha wetland ($0.087{\mu}mol\;cm^{-3}\;d{-1}$). The results implied that the water flow system of the Shiwha wetland was too stagnant to flush out the reduced pore water from the sediment, and thus anaerobic microbial respiration was limited by the availability of electron acceptors.

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