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  • Hordeum vulgare L.  (2)
  • 25.70.Gh  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1434-601X
    Keywords: 23.20.Lv ; 25.70.Gh ; 27.60.+j
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: Abstract The level scheme of 143 Eu has been extended to I=75/2 in an experiment with the NORDBALL Compton-suppressed Ge detector array and the 110 Pd(37 Cl, 4n) reaction. Most of the scheme shows irregular structure of multiparticle excitations. A strongly populated straight cascade of more than 10 stretched E2 transitions suggests the onset of collectivity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Hordeum vulgare L. ; inorganic N ; microbial biomass ; preceding crop effect ; soil respiration ; white clover-ryegrass residues
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Four different grass swards were grown on a sandy loam for 3 years, and then incorporated into the soil through rotovation in the spring. The treatments differed in the proportion of white clover (Trifolium repens) and ryegrass (Lolium perenne), both through seeding in pure stand or mixture and through N fertilization (0 or 150 kg N ha-1 yr-1) for the white clover-ryegrass mixtures. A control treatment (fallow), differing from the others in that the grass sward had been incorporated one year earlier, was also included. A spring barley (Hordeum vulgare cv. texane) crop was established in half of the experimental site and the other half was left unplanted. Carbon and nitrogen mineralization from the residues was measured as soil surface CO2 flux and soil inorganic N accumulation in unplanted plots under non-leaching conditions. Residue decomposition processes, barley dry matter production and N uptake showed clear differences between the five treatments, due especially to the differences in amount of residue N incorporated. Incorporated residue N was highest in the white clover in pure stand (C150), and lowest in the ryegrass in pure stand (G150) treatments, with non-fertilized and fertilized white clover-ryegrass residues (CG0 and CG150, respectively) intermediate and similar in both amount and quality of the residues. However, in spite of this similarity the treatments differed greatly with respect to both C and N mineralization, indicating that other factors than the measured quality parameters (i.e. C, N, C-to-N ratio, water solubles, cellulose, lignin) influenced their decomposition pattern. The highest crop dry matter production and N uptake was measured in the C150 treatment, followed by the CG0 and the fallow treatment, with considerable lower yields in the CG150 and G150 treatments. There was a significantly higher inorganic N content, 60 kg N ha-1, in the planted C150 and CG0 treatments during the seedling and tillering barley growth stages, with no significant difference between treatments during the later barley growth stages. Apparent net N mineralization measured in the unplanted CG0 treatment exceeded that of the C150, whereas the other treatments ranked similar to the barley N uptake rates. This indicated that availability of soil inorganic N at the early tillering stage was a key determining factor for the final barley dry matter yield and N uptake, with later N mineralization rates having lesser influence.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: ammonia ; barley ; gaseous nitrogen ; Hordeum vulgare L. ; nitrogen balance ; nitrogen harvest index ; nitrogen-15 tracer ; soil nitrogen
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The content of soil derived (unlabelled) and fertilizer derived (15N-labelled) nitrogen in the aerial parts of spring sown barley was followed during three growing seasons with widely different climatic conditions. The nitrogen fertilizer was NH4NO3. It was applied annually at four levels (30, 90, 120 and 150 kg N ha−1). The content of fertilizer derived N in the aerial parts of the barley plants was found to attain maximum level about the time of ear emergence. Thereafter it declined. The decline varied from about 5 to 40kg N ha−1. As much as 45% of the fertilizer derived N taken up earlier in the growing period was thereby lost. The content of soil derived N in the aerial parts of the barley plants was independent of the amount of applied N fertilizer and it increased steadily during the whole growing period. Any loss of soil derived N from the tops was therefore more than compensated for by continuous uptake of soil derived N through the roots. The greatest losses of fertilizer derived N took place from plants with a nitrogen harvest index (ratio between grain N content and total shoot N content) below 0.63 at maturity. In contrast, only little nitrogen was lost from plants with a nitrogen harvest index above 0.68 at maturity. The periods of rapid N losses did not coincide with the variation of the rainfall. The cause of the nitrogen loss is discussed and it is suggested that a substantial part of the loss was due to volatilization of ammonia from the aerial parts of the plants.
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