Four kinds of plant materials (astragalus, azolla, rice straw and water hyacinth) were allowed to decompose for 10 years in two soils with different mineralogical characteristics in fields under upland and submerged c...Four kinds of plant materials (astragalus, azolla, rice straw and water hyacinth) were allowed to decompose for 10 years in two soils with different mineralogical characteristics in fields under upland and submerged conditions. Greater amounts of C and N from azolla were retained in soils throughout the 10-year experimental period compared to those from the other plant materials. The residual C Of all the plant materials in the two soils under upland conditions mineralized st rates corresponding to half-lives between 4.4-6.6 years,while the corresponding figures for thine under submerged conditions were between 6.5-13.1 years. Minerallization of residual organic N followed the same pattern as residual C. Compared to residual C, however, the mineralization rates of residual organic N in most cases were significantly lower and the percentages of added N regained in sons were higher. More N from plat materials was retained in the yellow-brown soil than in the red soil, but no consistent differences in the amounts of C from plant materials and in the mineralization rates of both residual C and residual organic N between the two soils could be found.展开更多
文摘Four kinds of plant materials (astragalus, azolla, rice straw and water hyacinth) were allowed to decompose for 10 years in two soils with different mineralogical characteristics in fields under upland and submerged conditions. Greater amounts of C and N from azolla were retained in soils throughout the 10-year experimental period compared to those from the other plant materials. The residual C Of all the plant materials in the two soils under upland conditions mineralized st rates corresponding to half-lives between 4.4-6.6 years,while the corresponding figures for thine under submerged conditions were between 6.5-13.1 years. Minerallization of residual organic N followed the same pattern as residual C. Compared to residual C, however, the mineralization rates of residual organic N in most cases were significantly lower and the percentages of added N regained in sons were higher. More N from plat materials was retained in the yellow-brown soil than in the red soil, but no consistent differences in the amounts of C from plant materials and in the mineralization rates of both residual C and residual organic N between the two soils could be found.