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  • Canadian Science Publishing
  • 2015-2019
  • 1980-1984  (936)
  • 1984  (485)
  • 1981  (451)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 1981-09-01
    Description: In order to test the hypothesis that the deterioration of trembling aspen (Populustremuloides Michx.) is related to variations in climate, soil properties, and genotype, 59 trembling aspen clones were sampled in Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Ontario. A longevity index (LI) was calculated by taking the difference between predicted basal area from normal yield tables and measured basal area for each clone. Correlations of environmental variables with LI indicate that aspen longevity decreases with increasing mean annual temperature. Under similar temperature regimes, aspen growing on xeric sites and on sites low in exchangeable Ca are most susceptible to early breakup. Since there were negligible differences in soil properties between nine pairs of adjacent deteriorating and relatively well stocked clones, we hypothesize that, under similar environmental conditions, variation in the timing of deterioration may be due to genotypic differences between clones.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1984-10-01
    Description: A nonlinear analytical model is developed to describe the relationship between average plant size (weight or volume) and stand density in single-aged, monospecific plant populations. The model gives estimates of the slope and intercept of the −3/2 power rule asymptote, the nature of the size–density trajectory, and such features as relative density at crown closure and the effects of soil type or site index. The model is tested by growing red alder (Alnusrubra Bong.) seedlings under greenhouse and lath house conditions at three initial spacings (8 × 8, 4 × 4, and 2 × 2 cm) and two soil types (river loam and alder forest soil) for 525 growth days. There are seven harvests, starting at crown closure. All size–density trajectories tend consistently towards the same single asymptote irrespective of initial spacing, soil type, or age. The asymptote slope and intercept are 1.46 and ca. 94 kg tree−1•m−2. The crown closure line is parallel to the asymptote at a relative density of 4.6 × 10−3. The model also adequately describes the size–density trajectories for 20–50-year-old red pines (Pinusresinosa Ait.) growing at six initial spacings. The asymptote slope and intercept are 1.6 and ca. 87 × 103 m3•tree−1•ha−1, respectively.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: Reduced levels of root activity were associated with winter injury to shoots of 1-year-old black spruce (Piceamariana (Mill.) B.S.P.) container seedlings.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 1984-06-01
    Description: Three methods were compared for total sulphur analysis of tree foliage: magnesium nitrate ashing followed by turbidimetry, sodium hypobromite (NaOBr) oxidation followed by colorimetry, and an instrumental method using the Fisher S analyser, model 475. The latter method was found to be substantially better than the other methods with respect to accuracy and speed of analysis, and of satisfactory precision (average coefficient of variation (CV) was 2.5%). Dry ashing resulted in good precision (CV = 1.9%) but only recovered 76% of the reported total S in the United States National Bureau of Standards (NBS) orchard leaf standard. The NaOBr method recovered 88% of reported S from the NBS standard but showed poorer precision (CV = 4.5%). The Fisher analyser had the lowest operating cost per sample, largely owing to lower labour costs.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 1981-03-01
    Description: Total biomass of an aspen – mixed hardwood – spodosol ecosystem in northern Wisconsin, U.S.A., was 197 t/ha and net primary production was 11.5 t/ha per year. Populustremuloides Michx. accounted for 60% of the total biomass and 56% of the annual production and Acersaccharum Marsh, accounted for 25% of the biomass and 28% of the annual production. For all species combined, bole wood was 63% of the total biomass and bole bark was 12%. Bole wood was 33% and bole bark was 7% of the total production. Although crowns accounted for only 15% of the total biomass, they were responsible for 49% of net annual production. Using allometric equations from the literature, root biomass and production were calculated as being approximately 10% of the total biomass and of the annual production. The average rate of total production per unit leaf tissue was 5.7 g production/g leaf tissue for P. tremuloides and 3.7 g/g for A. saccharum.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 1981-06-01
    Description: Seedlings of five half-sibs (seedlings that share a commom maternal parent) of Pinustaeda L. exposed to a bidirectional mechanical perturbation for 6 months exhibited a reduced rate of stem elongation and a reduction in the length of both juvenile leaves and needles. Of the five half-sibs tested, two different anatomical mechanisms of radial enlargement could be identified. Two half-sibs exhibited increased radial growth in the xylem parallel to the direction of the perturbation and no change in the axis perpendicular to the perturbation. Two exhibited a reduction in growth perpendicular to the perturbation with no change in the axis parallel to the perturbation. One half-sib appears to be intermediate between the two other pairs of half-sibs.An overall increase in extractable compounds was observed in the organic solvent fraction of mechanically perturbed seedlings. The amount of lignin appeared to remain fairly constant, and there was no change in the amounts of holocellulose or water extractable compounds.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 1981-09-01
    Description: Above- and below-ground net primary production was estimated for 40-year-old Douglas-fir (Pseudotsugamenziesii (Mirb.) Franco) stands growing on sites with apparently large differences in productivity potential. Aboveground net production was estimated from direct measurements of tree growth; belowground productivity was derived from data obtained by sorting live and dead roots from soil cores used in combination with measurements of root growth on observation windows.Aboveground net production was 13.7 t•ha−1 on the high productivity site and 7.3 t•ha−1 on the low productivity site. Belowground dry matter production on the high productivity site was 4.1 t•ha−1 compared with 8.1 t•ha−1 for the poorer site. On the more productive site, 8% of total stand dry matter production was in fine roots in contrast to over 36% on the poorer site. The difference in total net production (aboveground plus belowground) between the two sites was small (2.4 t•ha−1). Apparent differences in aboveground productivity may, to a large extent, result from the need for a greater investment in the fine roots on harsher sites.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 1981-12-01
    Description: Low addition levels of high enrichment isotope (〉1% of the total nitrogen pool with 99 at.% excess 15N) were used to follow nitrogen movement through selected forest floor components of permafrost-free and permafrost-dominated black spruce ecosystems in subarctic Alaska. The nitrogen pool examined in this study was the total nitrogen pool. 15N was retained most effectively by the feather moss layer (Pleuroziumschreberi (BSG.) Mitt. and Hylocomiumsplendens (Hedw.) BSG.) on both black spruce sites. Twenty-eight months after isotope application the feather moss layer still contained over 90% of the 15N that could be recovered. The limited movement of 15N between feather moss layers and underlying forest floor horizons appeared to be slightly affected by climatological events. Differences in 15N movement patterns between permafrost-free and permafrost-dominated black spruce sites are discussed in terms of precipitation, soil temperature, and biological controls.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 1981-09-01
    Description: The mechanical and physiological support of a tree's crown is the principal function of its bole. A simple model for Douglas-fir (Pseudotsugamenziesii (Mirb.) Franco) of different crown classes explains much of the observed differences in stem form development. Sapwood cross-sectional area at any height on the bole of the tree was found to be related linearly to the amount of foliage above that point; however, in large trees the sapwood area needed to supply transpiring foliage with water is insufficient to provide mechanical support. The combination of sapwood and heartwood was found to provide the stem form that would be expected to ensure uniform resistance to bending by the wind.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 1981-09-01
    Description: Stem eccentricity in second-growth western hemlock (Tsugaheterophylla (Raf.) Sarg.) from southern coastal British Columbia appears to be the rule rather than the exception. Although the difference was small, the average eccentricity ratios (ratios of minimum diameter inside bark (DIB) to maximum DIB) for two Lower Mainland sites were significantly larger than those of two Vancouver Island sites. The average eccentricity ratio of all 87 trees studied was 0.929, with a standard deviation of 0.0231. The angular rotation of the major axis of the stem cross section varied greatly, and was positively related to the average stem eccentricity ratio within 5-m log lengths for each stem. Average eccentricity of the whole stem was relatively independent of diameter at breast height (DBH), age, stem height, and eccentricity at breast height. It does not appear that a practical field technique could be devised for the rapid estimation of average stem eccentricity in western hemlock.
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 1984-12-01
    Description: The effects of fertilization and thinning of Douglas-fir (Pseudotsugamenziesii (Mirb.) Franco) on the distribution of area increment along the bole were assessed using radial growth measurements 6 and 9 years after treatment. Within treatments, the average area increment per tree was linearly related to diameter at breast height, and this relationship was used to evaluate the effects of treatment on growth rate. Fertilization had the greatest effect on average area increment, and for a particular fertilization regime, thinning increased the response. Thinning modified the distribution of growth over the bole of all trees and increased butt flare, especially in smaller trees. The effect declined from the 4- to 6-year measurement period to the 7-to 9-year measurement period. Fertilization had no consistent effect on growth distribution. The regression methods used in this study provided a more sensitive measure of form changes than previous methods, were independent of size distribution, and facilitated extrapolations and evaluation of temporal trend.
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 1984-12-01
    Description: Organic content of the forest floor decreases for several years after clear-cutting, and then slowly recovers. Thickness, bulk density, organic matter, and nitrogen content of forest floors were measured for 13 northern hardwood stands in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Stands ranged from 1 to about 100 years in age. Forest-floor thickness varied significantly with stand age, but bulk density, organic fraction, and nitrogen fraction were independent of age. Total organic content of the forest floor agreed very well with data from Covington's (W. W. Covington 1981. Ecology, 62: 41–48) study of the same area. Both studies indicated that mature forest floors have about 80 Mg organic matter•ha−1 and 1.9 Mg nitrogen•ha−1. Within 10 or 15 years after cutting, the organic matter content of the floor decreases to 50 Mg•ha−1, and its nitrogen content to 1.1 Mg•ha−1. The question whether the decrease is rapid and the minimum broad and flat, or if the decrease is gradual and the minimum sharp, cannot be answered. The subsequent increase to levels reached in mature forest requires about 50 years. Some of the initial decrease in organic matter and nitrogen content of the forest floor may be caused by organic decomposition and nitrogen leaching, but mechanical and chemical mixing of floor into mineral soil, during and after the harvest operation, may also be important. The difference is vital with respect to maintenance of long-term productivity.
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 1984-06-01
    Description: Straw was added over snow to smother ground vegetation (straw experiment) in sample plots in a 45-year-old jack pine (Pinusbanksiana Lamb.) stand in Quebec. Sample plots in the same stand were fertilized six times with N, P, and K in a 10-year period to maintain four foliar N regimes (optimum nutrition experiment). Smothering of ground vegetation with straw improved N nutrition and produced a sustained increase in tree growth. Sustained growth increases were obtained by repeated applications of 56 kg N/ha associated with 1.4% N foliar concentrations in current foliage. Gross volume increments of about 3 m3 • ha−1 • year−1 were sustained with these low applications. Repeated heavy N applications killed trees and reduced growth. Repeated additions of P and K with N did not produce appreciable differences in response from additions of N alone. Increment cores showed the annual development in growth as increasing over most of the 10-year period for low repeated N additions, and as increased and stable over the same period for the straw addition.
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: In 4 different years' experiments with loblolly (Pinustaeda L.), slash (Pinuselliottiielliottii Engelm.), and longleaf (Pinuspalustris Mill.) pine, timing of gibberellin A4/7 (GA4/7) treatments was critical for optimal promotion of pollen conebuds. Two or three biweekly treatments given at strategic times were equivalent to six given from May to August. July to August applications best promoted pollen conebuds. Using the cationic surfactant Aromox C/12, aqueous foliar sprays of 200 mg/L of GA4/7 were more effective than ethanolic topical bud treatments for pollen conebud induction in slash pine. Addition of naphthaleneacetic acid enhanced the GA4/7 effect in loblolly pine but diminished it in slash and longleaf pine.
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
    Description: Root and shoot biomass and mycorrhizal development were examined for white spruce (Piceaglauca (Moench) Voss) seedlings naturally regenerating in four floodplain communities in the boreal forest. Mean seedling biomass was highest in the open community and lowest in the spruce community. Seedlings growing in the open community had higher root:shoot ratios (0.50) compared with seedlings growing in the willow (0.34), alder (0.20), and spruce (0.24) communities. Essentially all short roots of spruce seedlings growing in all four communities were infected by mycorrhizal fungi throughout the growing season.
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 1984-06-01
    Description: Growth response of young, spaced balsam fir (Abiesbalsamea (L.) Mill.) to 3 successive years (1979–1981) of treatment with Bacillusthuringiensis Berliner for spruce budworm (Choristoneurafumiferana (Clem.)) control was examined in 20 plots on the Cape Breton Highlands, Nova Scotia. Defoliation commenced in 1976, 3 years before control operations began. Five plots were established both inside and outside the spray block, in areas that had been severely defoliated by budworm and in areas moderately defoliated. All plots in the severely defoliated area suffered heavy tree mortality, but mortality was significantly lower in the protected plots. In contrast, the moderately defoliated plots suffered virtually no tree mortality. The average volume increment of stem-analyzed trees from 1979 to 1981 was 0.63 dm3/tree for protected and 0.43 dm3/tree for unprotected trees in the severely defoliated area versus 4.15 dm3/tree for protected and 3.08 dm3/tree for unprotected trees in the moderately defoliated area. These volume increment values are equivalent to 8.8 m3/ha of growth between 1979 and 1981 for protected plots in the moderately defoliated area, compared with 6.1 m3/ha for unprotected plots. Therefore, a total gain of 2.7 m3/ha can be attributed to the 3 years of B. thuringiensis spraying. Long-term growth responses toB. thuringiensis spraying were not evaluated. Better results would be expected had protection started at the beginning of the budworm outbreak, instead of after 3 years of severe defoliation.
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 1981-06-01
    Description: Constructing a dynamic model of growth in fir stands (age 30–70 years), based on gross physiological structure of the stand, made possible reasonable qualitative and quantitative forecasts of growth loss due to defoliation by insects in a wide variety of situations. Analysis of the model, in comparison with the natural world, indicates that the key to understanding growth loss in fir stands subjected to defoliation by spruce budworm lies in more explicit knowledge of the mechanisms of new foliage production.
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
    Description: Black alder, Alnusglutinosa (L.) Gaertn., seedlings were grown and kept well watered for 10 weeks, and then subjected to moisture stress conditioning for 5 subsequent weeks, where one-half of the seedlings were watered only when visibly wilted. The remaining seedlings (controls) were kept well watered. Moisture stress conditioning greatly reduced shoot, root, nodule, and total plant dry weight. The root–shoot ratio (grams/grams) of seedlings was significantly increased from 0.28 in the control seedlings to 0.33 in the water-stressed treatment. Acetylene reduction rates decreased only slightly in the range of water potentials between −0.50 and −1.29 MPa, then dropped rapidly below water potentials of −1.30 MPa. Moisture stress conditioning had no significant influence on this response. Although not significantly different, leaf and nodule osmotic potentials were consistently lower in the water-stressed plants.
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 1984-12-01
    Description: The relationships between foliage area and sapwood area between trees and within the crowns of 20 Piceasitchensis (Bong.) Carr., provenance Queen Charlotte Island, British Columbia (10 in a control plot and 10 in a plot fertilized with potassium and phosphorus 8 years before harvest) and 10 Pinuscontorta Dougl., provenance Ladysmith trees were examined using a physiological analysis based on Darcy's law. Foliage area index on the fertilized P. sitchensis plot was higher than on the control. The variation of foliage area density with depth in the canopies followed a normal distribution. Relationships between foliage area and sapwood basal area were linear but the slopes were different for the two species. There was no significant difference between the control and fertilized P. sitchensis trees. The relationship between foliage area and the product of sapwood area and permeability was linear and data from the three plots fell on the same line. Sapwood area, permeability, and their product decreased with depth through the crowns of the trees. Within the crowns, relationships between cumulative foliage area and sapwood area, and between cumulative foliage area and the product of sapwood area × permeability were different with species and treatment. A single linear relationship resulted when the product of cumulative foliage area above an internode × the internode length was plotted against sapwood area × permeability for the internode. This suggests that it is the drop in potential across a node and internode rather than the gradient of potential across the internode that is related to the flux of water through tree crowns. The data support the hypothesis that the relationship between foliage area and sapwood area depends on permeability of the sapwood and the local climate through its influence on transpiration rate, particularly via average water vapour pressure deficit of the air and stomatal conductance.
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 1984-06-01
    Description: Mathematical growth analysis techniques were used to assess the effects of atmospheric carbon dioxide enrichment on growth and biomass partitioning of Liquidambarstyraciflua L. (sweetgum) and Pinustaeda L. (loblolly pine) seedlings. Plants were grown from seed under high (1000 μmol•m−2•s−1) and low (250 μmol•m−2•s−1) photosynthetic photon flux density at CO2 concentrations of 350, 675, and 1000 μL•L−1 for 84 or 112–113 days. Elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration significantly increased height, leaf area, basal stem diameter, and total dry weight of sweetgum seedlings grown under high irradiance and to a lesser extent under low irradiance. Increases in dry matter accumulation were associated with early CO2 enhancement of net assimilation rate, but increases in amount of leaf surface area contributed more towards maintenance of larger size as seedlings aged. For sweetgum seedlings in particular, reduction of growth by low irradiance under normal atmospheric CO2 was compensated for by growing plants with elevated CO2. In contrast, elevated CO2 concentration produced no significant increase in growth of loblolly pine seedlings.
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 1981-03-01
    Description: Biomass distribution and above- and below-ground net primary production were determined for 23- and 180-year-old Abiesamabilis (Dougl.) Forbes ecosystems growing at 1200-m elevation in the western Washington Cascade Range. Total organic matter accumulations were 427.0 t•ha−1 in the young stand, and 1247.1 t•ha−1 in the mature stand. Aboveground tree and detritus biomass were 49.0 t•ha−1 and 130.2 t•ha−1, respectively, in the young stand compared with 445.5 t•ha−1 and 389.4 t•ha−1 in the mature stand. Net primary production (NPP) was 18.3 t•ha−1 in the young stand and 16.8 t•ha−1 in the mature stand. Belowground dry matter production was 65% of total net production in the young stand and 73% of total net production in the mature stand. Conifer fine root production was 35.9% of NPP in the young and 66.4% of NPP in the mature stand. This apparent shift in fine root production as a proportion of NPP may be related to detritus accumulation.
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 1981-06-01
    Description: An individual tree based stand growth model was analyzed, via dynamic programming, for thinning and final harvest strategies leading to maximum physical yields. Optimal density yield tables, indicating maximum yields and corresponding strategies, were constructed from the solution of the dynamic programming networks. Maximum yields averaged 25 – 30% higher than comparable yields reported previously for periodically thinned red pine plantations.
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 1984-10-01
    Description: Stomatal conductance was measured with porometers in two plots of Pinussylvestris L. with markedly different tree spacings (plot 1, 608 stems ha−1; plot 2, 3281 stems ha−1), and hourly rates of transpiration were calculated using the Penman–Monteith equation at intervals throughout one growing season. Stomatal conductance varied little in relation to height or age of foliage. There was a linear decrease in canopy conductance with increasing water vapour pressure deficit of the air. Transpiration rates on both plots increased during the summer (maximum 0.3 mm h−1); rates on plot 1 were always lower (ca. 0.7 times) than on plot 2. Needle water potentials were similar throughout the season and only slightly lower on plot 1 than on plot 2. The mean hydraulic resistance of the trees on plot 1 was 2.4 times that on plot 2. The results support a hypothesis that considers the changes in transpiration rate, conducting cross-sectional area, canopy leaf area, water potential, and hydraulic resistance following thinning as a set of homeostatic relationships.
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 1981-09-01
    Description: Jack pine (Pinusbanksiana Lamb.) seeds were sown in October, January, and March, and the seedlings were cultured under accelerated growth conditions in a greenhouse. At biweekly intervals, from May 15 to August 15, they were transplanted to a nearby nursery and sprayed with GA4/7 or GA4/7 + NAA. The following spring a fourfold increase in flowering was noted in trees receiving either of the GA4/7 treatments. Trees in the March sowing did not flower. The data suggest that the increased flowering was caused by GA4/7-mediated differentiation of lateral long-branch primordia into ovulate strobili.
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 1981-09-01
    Description: The effect of two levels of thinning (zero and [Formula: see text] of basal area removed) and three levels of nitrogen fertilization (0,224, and 448 kg N/ha) on crown development of codominant, 24-year-old Douglas-fir (Pseudotsugamenziesii (Mirb.) Franco) trees was studied over a 5- to 7-year period. Thinning and heavy ferilization separately increased needle mass per tree after 7 years by 90% and, when combined, by 271%. Yearly needle production peaked 2–3 years after fertilization and resulted from an increase in needle size, needle number per shoot, and number of shoots produced. Maximum foliage mass per tree was reached 4–7 years after fertilization. Thinning effect on needle production was lower initially, but increased throughout the study period. A continuing foliage production in branches low in the crown contributed to thinning effect on foliage mass and crown size. Foliage distribution was affected most in the top half of the crown by fertilization and in the bottom half of the crown by thinning. Fertilization increased branch elongation at all crown heights, but thinning alone had no effect on crown width down to whorl 12.
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
    Description: There is a need to provide quantitative relationships that will allow agronomists to estimate accurately the nitrogen-supplying power of soils while taking into account both temperature and soil moisture variations. The procedure for estimating net nitrogen mineralization proposed by Stanford and co-workers was used to determine Arrhenius relationships between the rate constants (k) and absolute temperature (°K) for 33 virgin and cultivated Western Canadian prairie surface (0–15 cm) soils. There was no significant difference in Arrhenius relationship between soils within each soil zone; thus, a single average Arrhenius equation was calculated per soil zone. Average Q10 for the Brown chernozemic soils was 2.75, for the Dark Brown, thin Black and thick Black chernozems, 2.18, and for the Gray luvisols, 2.0. These Q10 values are as high or higher than those reported in other parts of the world and may be related to the degree of degradation of the soil organic matter in these various soils. Culture had no marked effect on Q10 but sandy soils had higher Q10 than loams and clays. An equation for estimating net nitrogen mineralization for the Wood Mountain loam (a Brown chernozem) was tested using data from a previous study. The results were quite satisfactory, especially when the test data were derived under laboratory conditions where moisture was well controlled. The temperature functions presented herein can be used together with moisture functions and potentially mineralizable nitrogen results published earlier to make first estimates of net nitrogen mineralized during the growing season in the soils tested. Key words: Q10, Arrhenius relationship, potentially mineralizable nitrogen
    Print ISSN: 0008-4271
    Electronic ISSN: 1918-1841
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: The objective of this study was to compare the effects of various pretreatments on the X-ray identification and quantification of clay-sized minerals from some podzolic B horizons. After soil samples were treated with H2O2 to remove organic matter, clay fractions were dispersed, separated, and freeze-dried. A portion of each clay sample was subjected to the following pretreatments: ultrasonic bath, extraction by citrate-dithionite, extraction by 0.5 N NaOH, and extraction by Tiron. Oriented slides were used for identification and quantification of clay minerals after each pretreatment. The X-ray patterns for ultrasonically dispersed samples were used as a basis for evaluating the effectiveness of the three chemical pretreatments. Tiron pretreatment was found to be the most suitable method for removal of amorphous material from clay separates of podzolic B horizons. The traditional citrate-dithionite method was not effective in removing amorphous Si from clays. The 0.5 N NaOH method is not recommended because it resulted in significant destruction of phyllosilicates and it was not effective in removing amorphous Fe.
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
    Description: A single batch application of phosphorus once in several years might be a more economical practice for wheat production in Western Canada than the traditional annual application at seeding time. Annual phosphorus applications and batch applications once every 8 yr were compared. Response functions were estimated for annual applications for two locations in Saskatchewan and two in Manitoba. The response functions were used to determine the optimum application rates at each location. These optimums were compared with the profitability of the batch application to determine the economic optimum phosphorus application strategy. Three wheat/fertilizer price ratios were used in the analysis to examine the effect of changes in relative prices. The 100-kg batch application was economically preferred to annual applications for all three price ratios at three of the four locations. Only at Swift Current, Saskatchewan was the batch application not economically justified. The 100-kg batch application was economically superior to the 200-kg application at all locations studied.
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: The effect of labile inorganic phosphate (Pi) status of the soil on the decomposition of added cellulose and on the immobilization, mineralization, and redistribution of native and added P in soils was studied in a greenhouse incubation experiment. Cellulose was added at 765 μg C∙g−1 soil with and without P (9 μg∙g−1 soil) every 30 days under adequate N, H2O, and constant tempreature to two soils of different available P status. Lack of P eventually slowed down decomposition of added C, but this effect was partially compensated for by increased mineralization of organic P (Po) forms. Added P was redistributed to both P, (58–69%) and Po (42–31%) forms; higher amounts of Po were found in the soil with the highest Pi status. The correlation between microbial P uptake and solution P values was significant, and microbial C:P ratios ranged from 12:1 under high available P conditions to 45:1 where P was in low supply.
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: A theory is presented for the distribution of load pressures over the different phases in an unsaturated soil. It provides differential and integral relations between the equilibrium liquid pressure, the equilibrium solid pressure and the load pressure. Mechanical and thermodynamic models are presented by which the effective stress in unsaturated soils is defined. The value of the effective stress is then calculated for a certain state of a clay soil.
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 1981-03-01
    Description: The rate of invasion and height growth of vegetation in logged-over areas were studied on four forest site types in the white spruce – alpine fir (Piceaglauca (Moench) Voss – Abieslasiocarpa (Hook.) Nutt.) forests north of Prince George, B.C. On Cornus–Moss, Aralia–Dryopteris, and Devil's Club site types, which generally had full stocking, vegetation that grew under the canopy of trees was replaced after logging by aggressive pioneer species. Annuals were the first to invade the logged-over area, followed by biennials and perennials. The invasion of shrubs was the slowest. After logging, 6 or 7 years elapsed before vegetation became a serious hindrance to regeneration and, by that time, white spruce seedlings planted immediately after logging were tall enough to withstand competition. On the Alluvium site type, where stocking is usually open and shrubs and grasses that thrive in the logged-over areas are present, spruce seedlings were overtopped during the first growing season and eliminated as the density of shrubs increased.
    Print ISSN: 0045-5067
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 1981-11-01
    Description: It is becoming common for soil surveys to be made of the same area at different intensities and published at different scales. The principles of cartographic generalization are discussed that control the relationships between the map units and delineations on maps made from such surveys. A study of two sets of maps showed that almost no lines were coincident. Up to 20% of the small scale delinations could be ’inliers’ of different soils and about 15% of the large scale delineations would be outside their small scale equivalents. The same discrepancies are to be expected between large scale soil maps and the smaller scale maps of physiography or vegetation that are often used to stratify soils. Reasons for these discrepancies are discussed under the headings of simplification and classification. Recommendations arc made to guide the preparation of maps and legends for different intensities and scales of survey in the same area. These recommendations have practical implications for the planning of surveys and the designs of computer-based autocartography systems.
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 1981-08-01
    Description: The objectives of this study were to find ways to improve the accuracy of soil fertilizer recommendations by taking into account the variation in bulk density (BD) of organic soils. To achieve this end, field BD values of 30 organic soils (0.100–0.504 g/mL) were used to evaluate methods of measuring the BD in the laboratory by means of correlation and regression techniques. A simple and rapid procedure using the reconstituted BD of field-moist soils was the most accurate means of determining the average field BD in the laboratory, as indicated by the correlation coefficient obtained between the BD values obtained by this method and those in the field (r = 0.975**). The second most accurate method relied upon the exponential relationship between the water content of soils and their BD (R2 = 91.1 %). The least exact method of correcting for BD variations was to scoop a volume of dried (65 °C) and sieved (2-mm) soils, as is done in some soil test laboratories. Although the values obtained by this method were related (r = 0.502**) to the field data, drying caused shrinkage of soils, thereby increasing their BD about twofold. Soil pH (r = 0.716**) and percentage ash contents (r = 0.851**) were also related to the field BD of soils. These tests could be used to estimate the BD of soils when the preferred method cannot be used. Regression equations are provided for relating appropriate test values to the BD of organic soils.
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: Potassium deficiency in grapes, as well as in other fruit crops grown on soils in the Niagara peninsula, is a common and often serious problem. Ap horizon samples from 12 of these soils and grape petiole samples from nine of the soil locations were analyzed to elucidate the behavior of the soil K and its availability to grapes. The soils ranged in texture from sandy loam to silty clay and their clay mineralogy was relatively uniform with mica as the main layer silicate. Vermiculite was quantified by potential K fixation methods and was concentrated in the clay. Up to 5.8% vermiculite was present in the soils which seemed to be sufficient to reduce K availability by K fixation. Amounts of exchangeable K extracted with NaCl or NH4Cl were relatively high (0.46–2.09 meq/100 g) but were not correlated with K uptake by grapes. Energies of K exchange obtained from immiscibly displaced soil solutions were closely related to vermiculite contents and amounts of K fixed after air drying. Energies of K exchange and ratios of exchangeable K over exchangeable Ca + Mg were highly correlated with K uptake by grapes. Soils with energies of K exchange less than or equal to −2800 cal/equiv. or K exch./(Ca + Mg) exch. equal to or more than 7% appeared to have adequate amounts of available K for grapes. These two analyses therefore show promise for predicting K availability to grapes. Key words: Exchangeability of K, energy of K exchange, fixation of K, soil mineralogy, availability of K to grapes
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: In 1982, six crop rotation treatments that were initiated in 1967 on a Orthic Brown Chernozemic loam were sampled for soil NO3-N and moisture to a depth of 240 cm. Soil samples were taken on 18 May and 10 June from all treatments, on 2 Sept. on fallow treatments only, and on 14 Oct. from cropped treatments. Precipitation during the sampling period was about 23% above the long-term average. It was estimated that at least 123 kg NO3-N∙ha−1 were leached from the top 240 cm of fallow soils. Leaching appeared to result from a portion of the precipitation moving through macro soil pores. There was evidence that water and NO3-N might also move upwards from below the 240-cm depth. Of the six rotations examined, the 2-yr and 3-yr spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) rotations lost the most NO3-N. The presence of fall rye (Secale cereale L.) in a fallow-rye-wheat rotation was very effective in reducing NO3-N losses. Spring wheat, when grown continuously, was also very effective in reducing NO3-N losses but even here there was some evidence of leaching beyond the root zone. Application of fertilizer N and P at amounts based on soil test recommendations reduced NO3-N leached. It was estimated from long-term precipitation data, that over the past 100 yr about 20% of the soil organic N that was present at the time of breaking the land has been lost from the soil via leaching. It was concluded that leaching losses of N from the soils on the Canadian prairies had been greatly underestimated and were partly responsible for losses attributed to the more visible wind erosion. Key words: Nitrate movement, crop rotations, fertilizer and leaching, summerfallow and leaching, bimodal leaching
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: A preliminary field study was conducted to investigate the influence of fall applications of nitrogen and phosphorus on winter survival of winter wheat on zero-tilled and conventionally tilled land. Nitrogen fertilization tended to decrease winter survival while phosphorus fertilization tended to increase survival. A N-P interaction was observed, with the decrease in survival in response to added N being more evident in the absense of applied P. Balanced N-P fertilization may therefore result in highest winter survival in both conventionally tilled and zero-tilled winter wheat. Key words: Zero-tillage, winter survival, nitrogen, phosphorus, winter wheat
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
    Description: Increased use of sulphur (S) fertilizers in southern Alberta led to a series of field and phytotron experiments to investigate the importance of S fertilizers and the role of subsoil reserves of sulphate sulphur (SO4-S) for barley (Hordeum vulgare) and rapeseed (Brassica napus). Two types of experiments were conducted. In the field-plot studies, barley was grown on dryland soils low in surface SO4-S but underlain by subsoil high in SO4-S. Neither elemental nor SO4 forms of S significantly increased barley yields in a series of 10 experiments on those soils. The comparisons were made at three levels of N fertilizers. In a series of lysimeter studies, three successive crops were grown in soil low in inorganic S (2.0 μg SO4-S∙g−1), or soil supplemented with 25 μg 35SO4-S∙g−1 soil at specified depths in the lysimeters. Barley was adequately supplied with S from SO4-S at a depth of 54–72 cm. It obtained 55% of its S from a high SO4-S (25 μg∙g−1) layer of soil at that depth, although 40 days growth were required before the S was effectively utilized. Five times as much S was taken up by the barley when the entire soil received an additional 25 μg SO4-S∙g−1 as when only the 54- to 72-cm depth was supplemented; however, the yields were unaffected. Most of the excess S was retained in the straw. Rapeseed took up an increasing amount of SO4-S as the proportion of the lysimeters that initially contained SO4-S was increased. Rapeseed was also able to utilize SO4-S from a depth of 54–72 cm. Rapeseed showed deficiency symptoms when most of the added and soil reserves of S had been depleted by previous crops; its growth habit became indeterminate and seeds did not develop. Although total dry matter yield was not greatly affected, seed yield was markedly reduced in S-deficient rapeseed. Rapeseed took up 10 times as much S as did barley when the S supply was just adequate for seed production. Although rapeseed had a much higher S requirement than barley, both crops were adequately supplied by subsoil reserves of SO4-S under the field and controlled environment conditions studied. The studies suggest that fertilizer recommendations should be based on soil analysis to a depth of at least 60 cm. Key words: Sulphur fertilizer, sulphates, 35S, barley, rapeseed, nutrient uptake
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: The effect of 10, 15, 20 and 25 °C soil temperatures on the extractability of soil and fertilizer phosphorus (P) was examined in two soils, one containing free carbonate (pH 7.8) and the other non-carbonated (pH 6.9). The time course of fixation and desorption reactions were monitored. The extractability of P was also assessed using sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) extractions, desorption curves, and short-term uptake by wheat seedlings. Phosphorus-32 was used throughout. Opposing effects of temperature were found. An increase in incubation temperature from 10 to 25 °C decreased the amount of applied P extracted probably due to accelerated fixation reactions. This effect was established 1 day after the P was applied and persisted for 57 days. An increase in extraction temperature over the corresponding incubation temperature increased the extractability of P, indicating endothermic desorption reactions. This effect was established 1 h after the extraction began and persisted for 48 h. Hence, the net effect of temperature on the extractability of P will depend upon the balance of these opposing processes. The time course of these processes had two phases. The effects of temperature were established during the initial phase (
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 1984-11-01
    Description: Growth chamber and field studies were conducted to assess the relative utilization of placed and broadcast 15N-urea by spring wheat. The field studies were conducted on zero and conventional (shallow) tillage systems, of 4-yr duration, located on Chernozemic soils at two locations in Saskatchewan. Placement below the seeding depth in comparison to broadcast application, generally reduced fertilizer N immobilization and increased fertilizer N uptake, recovery, and efficiency. Under moisture stress, placed applications were effective in enhancing dry matter yield and total N uptake. It is concluded that fertilizer N placement for these two contrasting tillage systems should be identical, thus some soil disturbance under zero tillage may be necessary to achieve optimum crop use of applied fertilizer N. The dominant N transformation processes and possible tillage induced differences, in regard to methods of N application, are discussed. Key words: Placed and broadcast N application, N efficiency, N utilization, 15N-urea, zero tillage, soil moisture
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
    Description: The forest floor of a mature, naturally regenerated conifer stand on a well-drained podzolic soil in the Central Uplands of New Brunswick was sampled systematically. The forest-floor properties measured were: oven-dried mass per unit area, depth, moisture content, pH, potassium-chloride-extractable NH4-N and NO3-N, water-soluble phosphate, and ammonium-acetate-extractable K, Mg, and Ca. Total elemental C, N, P, K, Mg, Ca, Al, Fe concentrations were also determined. Coefficients of variation varied from 0.066 (total C) to 1.78 (2 N KCl-extractable NO3-N). Concentrations (measured in ppm or percent) were in each case less variable than absolute amounts (measured in kilograms per hectare). Frequency distributions were positively skewed (except for total C and N) and appeared to follow a gamma or Weibull distribution pattern. Key words: Ferro-Humic-Podzol, forest floor, lateral variability, spruce-fir forest, systematic sampling
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 1984-11-01
    Description: A descriptive system is outlined for characterizing, in thin sections, the micromorphology of organic soils and organic layers. In each thin section, distinct regions of morphology, fabric zones, can be recognized. Each fabric zone may be composed of various combinations of organic constituents. These constituents are designated as basic morphologic units and four main types are defined: particulate material, granular units, discrete compound particles, and massive-appearing fabric. The fabric zone and basic morphologic units can be coded in a fabric description symbol of the following simple general form [Fabric Unit]1 …[Fabric Unit]n, where [Fabric Unit] represents a particular fabric zone and its basic morphologic units. For example, [PpGa] [Ma] is a fabric description symbol indicating that two fabric zones are identified in the thin section. The first [PpBa] is the dominant fabric zone in the thin section (areal proportion) and is composed of two basic morphologic units, mainly recognizable plant fragments, Pp, and a lesser occurrence of amorphous granular material, Ga. The second fabric unit [Ma] indicates a fabric zone composed of one basic morphologic unit: amorphous massive-appearing fabric, Ma. The system is applied to the micromorphological characterization of a Typic Mesisol from Keswick, Ontario. Key words: Microcorphology, organic soils, descriptive method, characterization
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 1981-08-01
    Description: In a recent cooperative study, in which four laboratories participated, organic matter in a large number of Canadian soil samples was characterized by relatively simple methods. As result of this work we are proposing a procedure for the extraction, separation and characterization of soil organic matter. The procedure includes determinations of organic C and total N in initial soils, followed by the isolation from the soils of humic and fulvic acids. Total C and N and E4/E6 ratios are then determined in the latter fractions. From these data, proportions of extractable soil-C and soil-N and HA/FA ratios are computed.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: We, as well as others, have observed that nitrous oxide (N2O) fluxes increased markedly during soil thaw in early spring. This phenomenon was examined further by determining nitrous oxide concentrations in the soil profile and N2O fluxes from the soil surface during the winter-spring period and evaluating physical release and microbial production of N2O on thawing of frozen soil cores in the laboratory. In mid-winter, soil profile N2O concentrations were close to ambient and surface N2O fluxes were low. At thawing, high N2O concentrations (ranging from 1082 to 2066 mg∙m−3) were found at 10–30 cm in the soil profiles of a coniferous forest, and in manure- and straw-treated plots. Concurrently, N2O flux increased markedly and reached some of the highest values observed during the entire season. When thawing was complete, soil profile N2O concentrations and N2O flux declined. Soil cores were taken from frozen soil, warmed in the laboratory, and N2O release measured. Nitrous oxide was released on warming, and cores treated with CHCl3 had a slower release rate. The results indicate that some of the N2O flux occurring at thawing is due in part to physical release of N2O, and that additional N2O is likely produced by denitrification. Key words: Nitrous oxide, denitrification, frozen soils, nitrogen loss
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
    Description: The objective of this study was to determine the magnitude of biologically immobilized and/or chemically fixed N (N retained) resulting from N addition to soils under laboratory conditions. Urea (200 μg N/g of soil) tagged with 21.0 atom % 15N was added to 11 Manitoba soils. The relationship between microbial immobilization and/or chemical fixation of added N and soil characteristics was determined using forward stepwise and multiple linear regression analyses. Three to 32 ppm of added N was immediately retained by the soils after urea was added. Biological immobilization and/or chemical fixation was virtually completed within the first 4 wk of incubation with only one soil showing continuous increase in the retention of applied N during the remainder of the experiment. Amounts of urea N retained in soils during the 12-wk incubation period ranged from 16 to 91 ppm. The initial retention of N was positively correlated with sand + silt fraction and negatively correlated the pH of the soil, the R2 value being 0.86**. Correlations between, 15N retained and organic matter (OM) content for 4 and 8 wk of incubation were positive (R2 = 0.40* and 0.53*, respectively). After the 12 wk of incubation, the retention of added N by soils was positively correlated with OM and negatively correlated with soil pH (R2 = 0.74**). The retention of N with pooled data of 4, 8 and 12 wk of incubation was positively correlated with OM and negatively correlated with both pH and CEC of the soils (R2 = 0.73**). Mineralization of soil N and retention of added N for 4, 8 and 12 wk of incubation were found to be positively correlated, the r2 values being 0.42*, 0.52* and 0.42*, respectively. Gaseous losses of applied N appeared to be appreciable in only one soil. Ten of the eleven soils showed no or little N interchange, suggesting that a significant proportion of the applied urea N appeared to be truly immobilized and/or fixed in soils.
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: Rounding of the lands in a field involves changes in the surface horizons. The thickness of Ap horizons at various sites in corn fields varied from 15 to 41 cm. In these horizons, the organic matter content that ranged between 10 and 250 t/ha influenced the real density of the particles, the bulk density of soils with similar texture, and also the shape of the water retention curves at tensions from 0 to 1.5 MPa. Maximum available water in the Ap horizons between 33.3 kPa and 1.5 MPa varied from 0.5 to 4 cm H2O. Yield differences reached 74% while the standard deviations were generally lower than 15%. Higher yields were observed at higher, intermediate and lower sites of the fields. The differences in the yield were not entirely accounted for by the variations in the chemical and physical properties of the soils.
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
    Description: A loamy soil amended with sewage sludges chemically treated with Ca(OH)2, Al2(SO4)3 or FeCl3 was used for P adsorption studies. Phosphate adsorption was increased by sludge application in the order: Ca-sludge 〉〉 Al-sludge = Fe-sludge 〉 untreated soil, and was associated wtih the increase in CaCO3 and hydrous iron and aluminum oxide countents resulting from sludge application.
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
    Description: The effect of phosphorus fertilization on potato yields (Solanum tuberosum L.) was studied on 24 experimental sites varying from 44 to 1000 kg/ha of soil test P. The respective relative yields (yield with P fertilizer/maximum yield with P fertilizer x 100) varied from 20.3 to 100%. The Mitscherlich equation was used to relate relative yields to soil test P. According to their soil test value, the soils were partitioned in three classes by the Cate-Nelson method to establish poor (300 kg/ha of available P or less), medium (301–400 kg/ha P) and rich 401 kg/ha P or more) soil fertility classes. It was found that 94 kg/ha fertilizer P was necessary for maximum yields with an increase of 10% or greater on poor soils. On medium and rich soils, the requirement was 50 kg P/ha for a yield increase of 1–10%. Below a 1% increase, the P application should be lowered. At high rates diammonium phosphate (DAP) has been found to give tuber yield equal to those of superphosphates. On the other hand, at low rates, DAP application was more effective. DAP induced a higher mid-season P concentration in the petiole tissue Acidification by superphosphates increased aluminum, iron and manganese availability in the soil and reduced P solubility in the band area, in contrast to DAP. Key words: Potato, soil test phosphorus, source of phosphorus fertilizer, phosphorus fertilization, superphosphate, ammonium phosphate
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: Dicyandiamide has physical, chemical and biological properties that render it suitable for use as an inhibitor of nitrification of injected anhydrous ammonia (NH3). It is readily soluble and stable in NH3 and, when applied at 15 kg/ha, it effectively inhibited nitrification of injected urea for 3 mo in soil at ca. 5 °C. These properties are relevant to the practice of fall application of NH3, with its attendant risk of loss of some of the applied nitrogen before spring sowing, as a result of nitrification.
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: The change in the extractability of soil phosphorus (P) in response to temperature was examined in 12 Manitoba soils. These soils varied in carbonate and P contents. The soil P was labelled with 32P to facilitate measurements. Sodium bicarbonate extractions, anion exchange resin extractions, P desorption curves and short-term plant uptake using wheat were used to measure P extractability. An increase in soil temperature increased the extractability of P. This was apparent for P extracted by NaHCO3 only in soils low in P. The P extracted by resin appeared to respond similarly but was quite variable. Effects of temperature on the desorption curve parameters were significant only in soils high in P. The latter may reflect the detection limits for P using the desorption curve extraction system. Plant uptake was closely correlated to root growth. Both increased markedly as temperature increased. However, in certain soils the increase in P uptake due to temperature was far greater than the corresponding increase in root growth. The estimates of the labile pool accessed by plants increased as temperature increased. The principle hypothesis, that the effect of temperature on P extractability changed from soil to soil, was confirmed. The only controlling soil factor that could be identified was the basic soil P content. Key words: Temperature, soil phosphorus, carbonated, non-carbonated, plant uptake, wheat
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: Differences between analyses of washed and unwashed filbert leaves were found for N, P, Mg, S, B, Mn, Zn and Cu but not for K and Ca. The contamination was attributed primarily to particulates since washing reduced average leaf weight measurements. The magnitude of the contamination varied among orchards and between years. It was concluded that washing leaves is essential for both micro- and macronutrient considerations. Key words: Filberts, leaf washing, macronutrients, micronutrients, contamination
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 1981-08-01
    Description: The effects of long-term irrigation on soil salinity were studied at 13 selected sites within four major irrigation districts in southern Alberta. Of these sites, 10 have been under irrigation for over 60 yr and three for 25 yr. Soil textures ranged from sandy loam to clay. The total soluble salts in the soil profiles were either reduced or unchanged after long-term irrigation at all sites except one, which had an 11% increase but an EC of the saturation extract still less than 1 mS∙cm−1. The magnitude of reduction in soluble salts of the other soil profiles was related to the initial salt content and ranged from 0 to 82% of the original content. The SAR decreased in the subsoil at all sites. It is evident that long-term irrigation did not salinize the soils at these sites, which are considered to be representative of much of the irrigated land in this area.
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 1981-08-01
    Description: Potassium fertilizer requirement of rain-fed cotton was evaluated in a 3-yr field study conducted at three locations using four rates (0, 25, 50 and 75 kg∙ha−1)of K. Significant response was not obtained above 25 kg∙ha−1 applied K. Quadratic polynomials, using leaf K, exch. K, exch. (Ca + Mg)/K and applied K as independent variables, were fitted to the seed-cotton yield. As a single parameter, leaf K emerged the best predictor of yield with a coefficient of multiple determination (R2) of 86% and a corresponding regression equation of: Y (yield) = 3099.2 + 6031.6%K − 1643.3 (%K)2, followed by fertilizer K with a coefficient of multiple determination of 81% and a yield equation of: Y = 1302.3 + 53.96 app. K − 0.54 (app. K)2. Soil exch. K and (Ca + Mg)/K ratio were slightly less efficient in predicting yield giving R2 values of 0.62 and 0.76, respectively, when both the linear and quadratic terms were entered into their respective yield equations. When all the 12 possible entries (linear, and second-order terms and their square root transformations) were fed into the computer and regressed over cotton yield using a step-wise regression procedure, only two variables, leaf %K and (Ca + Mg)/K, significantly fitted the yield equation giving a predictive value of 87%. But the improvement in the precision of yield predictability as measured by the R2 value was only marginal and would not justify recommending the equation considering the extra laboratory work that will be needed to obtain the relevant variables. Critical values of 1.84% in index leaf, 0.19 meq/100 g exch. K and 50 kg∙ha−1 applied K were approximated for a maximum predicted yield range of 2440–2700 kg∙ha−1.
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: not available
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: The effects of soil and solution pH and Na:Ca ratio in solution on the exchangeable Na, Ca, and (Na + Ca) of a Na-saturated Dark Brown Chernozemic soil were studied. At soil pH 9.0, the exchangeable Na, Ca, and (Na + Ca) were 14.5, 25.4, and 21.8% greater than at soil pH 6.0. Solution pH (6.0–9.0) had small but statistically significant effects on the amount of Na and Ca adsorbed by the soil. The logarithm of exchangeable sodium percentage (ESP) was related to the Na fraction in the solution by a polynomial equation, log ESP = 0.93 [Na/(Na + Ca)]2 + 0.16 [Na/(Na + Ca)] + 0.82. Not only is replacement of exchangeable Na with Ca important in the reclamation of this soil, should it become sodic and have a high pH, but also lowering of its surface charge, through lowering of its pH, would be an important factor in its reclamation. It appears impractical to reduce soil pH by applying acidified irrigation water. Acidic amendments such as gypsum and sulfur may be more suitable. Key words: Cation exchange, solution pH, soil pH
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: Surface samples of five Quebec soils (St. Bernard, Ormstown, Howick, Dalhousie and Bearbrook) were selected to represent typical agricultural soils with a range of parent material. Soil minerals were fractionated by size into five separates and examined using X-ray diffraction (XRD) techniques and chemical analyses. In nearly all cases the non-clay separates (250–2.0 μm) contained feldspars, amphiboles and quartz as dominant minerals with only small amounts of layer silicates. Feldspars, amphiboles and quartz were also relatively abundant in the clay separates. The layer silicates in the clay separates consisted mainly of mica, chlorite and vermiculite. The soils had similar mineral suites, considered indicative of a low degree of weathering. Considering the mineral composition and the low degree of weathering, it is proposed that primary K-bearing minerals, including K-feldspars, are important sources of K in these soils. Key words: K release, particle size, soil mineralogy
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: Leaf tissue nutrient concentrations measured over 3 years in 17 filbert orchards showed consistent correlations between N/S, Cu/S, Zn/Cu, Ca/K, Mg/K and Mg/Ca. Optimum concentrations of 1.44% Ca, 0.27% Mg, 0.14% S, 8.8 ppm Cu, and 19.5 ppm Zn were calculated using regression equations of the various correlations and optimum values of N and K (2.2% N and 0.8% K) reported in the literature. Correlations between leaf and soil nutrient concentrations were observed but they were not consistent over the 2 years and all depths (0–15, 15–30, 30–60 cm) of soil samples taken. Average leaf weight measurements were sufficiently consistent within orchards to allow detection of orchard to orchard differences. Several nutrients appeared to affect or be affected by average leaf weight. Average leaf weights appear to have potential as a biologically important measurement but the significance has yet to be derived. Key words: Filberts, macronutrients, micronutrients, optimum leaf concentrations, leaf weights
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: Soils affected by tree-throw (arbroturbation) at three sites in Nova Scotia varied in development and microrelief characteristics. Soil horizonation was strongly developed and continuous through the mound-and-pit sequence at one site but was intermittent and irregular at the other two sites. Analytical data, particularly those for oxalate- and pyrophosphate-extractable Fe and Al reflected the morphological variations observed in the pedons. Classification of the arbroturbated soils according to the Canadian system is not a problem though it is necessary to indicate turbation by appending a phase to the soil class name at levels above the series. Mapping areas of such soils involves no change from regular procedures except in the description of the soil units. Hummocky microrelief due to arbroturbation presents some limitations in the use of land. Key words: Physical disturbance, classification, mapping, land use
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: Growth chamber studies were conducted on the effects of placing NH4H232PO4 either in a single band below and/or to the side of the seed at rates of 10–30 kg P/ha, or with the seed at 5 kg P/ha, on growth and on uptake of soil and fertilizer P by flax (Linum usitatissimum L. ’Linott’). Two P-deficient Chernozemic soils were used; one calcareous, the other non-calcareous. On both soils, all placements of applied P significantly increased yield of flax. For all application rates, P placed 2.0 cm directly below the seed (taproot placement) was more efficient in increasing yield than P placed 1.5 cm to the side at 0.5 or 2.0 cm below the seed (shallow- and deep-side placements). The greatest yield increase occurred with taproot placement of 10 kg P/ha. Maximum yield for the deep-side placement also occurred at this rate, whereas a two- to threefold higher rate was required for maximum yield for the shallow-side placement. Only taproot placement of 10–30 kg P/ha and shallow-side placement of 30 kg P/ha gave significantly greater yields than seed placement of 5 kg P/ha. However, crop uptake of fertilizer P for all away-from-seed placements was at least double that for P banded with the seed.
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  • 60
    Publication Date: 1981-11-01
    Description: A micromorphological feature, termed a grain sesquosiltan, was identified in the Bf and BC horizons of some podzols in Eastern Ontario. It is suggested that the inherited or cryogenically-derived dense silasepic fabric has been gradually modified over time by weathering, illuviation and pedoturbation. This has resulted in the formation of silt/sesquioxide coatings around sand grains.
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: In 1975, hydrated lime and calcium sulfate were applied to a Rutland gravelly sandy loam under the canopy of mature apple trees (Malus domestica Borkh. ’Spartan’) on M16 at 3000, 6000, 3 × 2000 and at 3000, 6000, 3 × 4000 kg/ha, respectively, pH and exchangeable Ca, Mg and Mn were measured in the soil sampled in 1979 at 10-cm intervals to a 60-cm depth for each of the check, 6000 kg/ha Ca(OH)2 and 12 000 kg/ha gypsum treatments. The acidity of the surface soil was decreased significantly in the 6000 kg/ha Ca(OH)2 treatment. Negligible soil Ca accumulation occurred below the surface 10-cm depth for any treatment. Soil Mn was decreased from the surface to the 20-cm level in the Ca(OH)2 treatment while soil Mg was decreased from the surface to the 30-cm level in the gypsum treatment. Fruit Ca concentration at harvest, 1975–1979 was not increased by soil Ca treatments. Leaf Mg was often reduced by soil gpysum applications in excess of 3000 kg/ha. Leaf Mn reduction did not occur until the 4th and 5th yr of the experiment in the 6000 and the 3 × 2000 kg/ha Ca(OH)2 treatments.
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: Rapeseed grown in pots on a S-deficient soil showed little response to elemental S fertilizers applied at rates of up to 150 ppm S. The dry matter yields, percent S and N/S ratios of the aboveground material indicated severe S deficiency in the crop. A readily available S source (ammonium sulfate) at rates of 75 and 30 ppm S increased yield by three to five times over that produced by the highest rates of elemental S.
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: The 1981 Census of Agriculture statistics was used to estimate manure production from livestock activities in Quebec. Only 10 of the subdivisions (1%) were found to have an improved farmland base that was inadequate to meet the total manure stocking rate (TMSR) regulation (i.e. 0.3 ha per animal unit (AU) of production). There were two areas, one near Granby in the Yamaska River basin and another near the outlet of the Chaudiere River, where there was a substantial number of adjoining subdivisions with TMSRs above 2.0 AU∙ha−1. Analysis of soil survey data indicated a greater potential for groundwater contamination in the Chaudiere than in the Yamaska high-density subdivisions. However, about 15% of animal manure production in Quebec was on farms which did not meet the land base requirement. Hog waste constituted about 83% and poultry waste 13% of the manure produced on farms with inadequate improved land. Key words: Water pollution, animal waste, non-point sources, manure applications
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
    Description: Micromorphological study of Turbic Cryosols (permafrost soils) from the MacKenzie River Valley and Yukon Coastal Plain resulted in the observations of distinct unnamed fabric distributions that implied rearrangement of the skeleton grains and f-members. It was noted that the skeleton grains or f-members were capable of independent reorganization in relation to the plasma or f-matrix. Three modal fabric types were defined as follows: 1. Orbiculic fabric — The skeleton grains or f-members are reorganized into circular or ellipsoidal patterns. 2. Suscitic fabric — The skeleton grains or f-members are vertically aligned and often show an accumulation of finer matrix material at the base. 3. Conglomeric fabric — A compound distribution in which individual f-members are enclosed by finer matrix material into a secondary fabric such as fragmic or granoidic. The interpretation of the genesis of these fabrics may aid in understanding the developmental history of the soil, especially those soils that have been subjected to cryogenic processes.
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 1984-11-01
    Description: The potential of several field tests for differentiating podzolic B horizons from others was studied. The spodic horizon test involved determinations of 4 N KOH-extractable Al and the color of humic extracts. The 0.5% HCl-HF test and the acid oxalate test both involved a rating of the intensity of color of the extracts. For the samples tested, the HCl-HF test was the most promising on the basis of less dependence on correct sample weight, simplicity, and the best differentiation of the podzolic B horizons tested. For samples having borderline properties, however, such field tests might yield ambiguous results because sample weights and estimates of extract colors are not accurate. In most circumstances, sampling for laboratory analyses is recommended to resolve classification problems. Key words: Field test, podzolic B horizon, spodic horizon
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
    Description: Terbacil in concentrations up to 500 μg∙g−1 of sandy loam soil had little effect on populations of actinomycetes, bacteria, and fungi under laboratory and field conditions during a period of 5 mo. Concentrations up to 700 μg of terbacil∙mL−1 did not affect the in vitro growth of 111 strains of agriculturally important microorganisms, including effective, parasitic, and lysogenic rhizobia from seven cross-inoculation groups, pathogenic, attenuated, and saprophytic agrobacteria, azotobacters, and other bacteria, actinomycetes, and fungi. Terbacil inhibited the respiration of total soil microbiota, of bacteria, and of fungi at all concentrations tested. By contrast, it stimulated the respiration of actinomycetes at concentrations up to 500 μg∙mL−1 and partially inhibited it at 700 μg∙mL−1. Replication of bacterial and actinomycete isolates showed minimal inhibition by the extreme concentrations.
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
    Description: In Chernozemic soils, active CaCO3, an estimate of the CaCO3 in the clay and fine silt particles, proved to be a more effective site index for several tree species than total CaCO3. In general, active CaCO3 exceeding 7–9% caused incidences of stunted growth and chlorosis. High levels of active CaCO3 within the 0–30 cm soil depth were related to enrichment of CaCO3 in the clay fraction.
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
    Description: The study of subsidence of organic soils requires measurements of changes in thickness of various layers in the deposit. This was achieved by drilling a bore hole to place magnetic targets at different levels. Using a fabricated detecting device, variations of thickness to 0.05 mm could be detected.
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
    Description: A 5-yr study showed that deep plowing under irrigation is a promising reclamation procedure for Solonetzic soils containing a calcium-enriched Csk horizon within a depth to which the soil may be plowed. The liberal application of nitrogen-phosphate fertilizers on irrigated soils after deep plowing may cause leaching of calcium.
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
    Description: Temperature was recorded at replicate locations in a rape field, both in the soil and in the crop canopy. Sources of variability in these records are examined, and the temperatures are compared with standard records from nearby meteorological stations. Variability within replicates depends on elevation, reaching a maximum at a soil depth of 5 cm. Temperatures in the soil of the rape field were more extreme than those recorded under sod at a nearby meteorological station, though the differences were small when a full rape canopy was present. Removal of the canopy at harvest caused wide diurnal fluctuations and an increase in the average daily maximum at all crop elevations, though temperatures recorded at a nearby meteorological station were similar before and after harvest. Linear regression equations are provided that estimate daily maximum and minimum temperatures in the soil of the rape field to a depth of 20 cm from standard meteorological records.
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
    Description: Poultry manure from birds fed a ration containing 11 μg chlortetracycline (CTC)/g feed contained 22.5 μg CTC/g. Recovery rates of CTC added to manure were low (22–28%), so 22.5 μg/g must be considered a low estimate. When manure containing CTC was added to soil, no CTC was recovered at manure to soil ratios greater than 1:10. CTC in manure added to soil at practical levels did not affect the respiration pattern of the soil.
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: The K release characteristics of surface samples from five Quebec soils were investigated. Each soil was fractionated by size into six separates. Each separate was extracted with 1 M ammonium acetate (NH4OAc), with 1 M nitric acid (HNO3) and with sodium tetraphenylboron (NaTPB) and the K extracted was determined. The clay separates contained most of the HNO3 and NaTPB-extractable K. The average amounts of K removed by 1 M HNO3 and NaTPB from the clay was up to 16 times more than that released from silt or sand fractions. The strong relationship between extractable K and clay content was probably due to the similarity in mineralogical composition and degree of weathering of these soils. Clay-sized chlorite and vermiculite were destroyed by the HNO3 extraction but not by the NaTPB extraction. Crop response to K fertilizer was generally reduced as clay content and extractable K increased. Key words: Extractable K, NaTPB-K, HNO3-K
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
    Description: Ontario Soil Survey data for 278 soil series were interpreted to describe relationships between soil characteristics and the movement of water in saturated zones of the soil profile. Based on family particle size classes, groups of soil families, similar in profile and parent material, were formed. Groups were ordered in terms of increasing ability of soil to transmit water, as interpreted by Soil Conservation Service guidelines. The ordered groups were separated into two parts using the European concepts for surface water gley and groundwater gley soils. Six groups of surface water gley soils were differentiated in which surface water was interpreted as the principle source of saturation. Groundwater was interpreted to be the principle source of saturation for three groups of groundwater gley soils. Principles applied to grouping and ordering were augmented by data for soil texture and structure to develop a generalized profile description for each group. The generalized profile description was translated into a five symbol code by which the interpretation is applied to individual soil series within a group. The code is intended to enhance application of soil survey data to design of buried agricultural drainage systems. Key words: Soil physical characteristics, drainage characteristics, hydrologic soil groups, surface water Gleysols, groundwater Gleysols, pseudogleysols
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: Research on soil mesofauna distribution and diversity was conducted on a cultivated Gray Luvisol near Breton, Alberta. Particular reference was made to the soil Collembola (springtails) and the Acarina (mites). Seven different vegetative regimes (grass litter, balsam leaves, aspen leaves, straw litter, fescue grass, alfalfa, check) were established on 14 (2 m × 2 m) microplots. Microarthropod distribution and diversity were found to be dependent on a number of soil parameters such as temperature, moisture, depth, nutrient status, microhabitat availability and vegetative cover. Seasonal changes were also monitored. Examination of soil thin-sections revealed that a wide variety of fauna contribute to the reorganization of fabrics, especially in the upper 7 cm of soil. These fauna varied in their significance throughout the microplots. Fecal pellets of 280–350 μm size were encountered, commonly comprising mull-like material. Insect larvae are thought to be responsible but their type is unknown. The authors stress the need for further research in this area to establish the role and importance of the soil mesofauna in the soil ecosystem. Key words: Soil mesofauna, Acarina, Collembola, soil microstructure
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: The equilibration of acid soils, a Sombric Ferro-Humic Podzol (CSSC-2) from British Columbia, an Orthic Ferro-Humic Podzol (CSSC-19) from Quebec and two horizons of a Dystric Brunisol (SSD-330, SSD-331) from British Columbia, with CaSO4 solution demonstrated that SO4 ions reacted with components of these soils. These reactions increased soil pH, ion activity product (Al)(OH)3 and neutral salt extractable exchangeable cations. The increase in pH and ionic activity product (Al)(OH)3 were noticeable on a single equilibration; however, increase in neutral salt extractable cations was only observed after subsequent equilibrations. After three equilibrations, the sums of NaCl extractable cations were 6.56, 11.99, 5.62 and 4.31 meq/100 g for soil samples CSSC-2, CSSC-19, SSD-330 and SSD-331, respectively. The corresponding values for the unequilibrated soils were 5.20, 7.49, 4.30 and 2.50 meq/100 g. On further equilibration there was no increase in total extractable cations for sample CSSC-2; however, for the other three samples there were increases which became progressively smaller. The reaction of SO4 ions with aluminum hydroxy clay complexes seems to be the mechanism for the increase of negative sites. Key words: Cation exchange capacity, CaSO4, acid soils
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: Soil samples, mainly from eastern and northern Canada, were extracted with sodium hydroxide-pyrophosphate and the centrifuged extracts were fractionated into humic acid, fulvic acid and the polyphenolic component of the fulvic acid fraction. Details of the extraction and fractionation procedure were altered systematically and the effects of these changes on amounts of carbon in the various fractions were studied. A tenfold increase in the ratio of soil to extracting solution resulted in a marked increase (nearly double in some cases) in the ratio of humic acid carbon to fulvic acid carbon (Ch/Cf). Increasing the centrifugal force from 1150 × g to 8200 × g had little effect on Ch, but decreased Cf values. Dissolving and reprecipitating humic acid resulted usually in a decrease in Ch/Cf. Different shaking speeds and times, and extraction under nitrogen rather than air had minor, if any, effects on the Ch/Cf ratios. Most of the podzolic B horizons tested could be distinguished from the other 60 horizons by the combination of C ext (extractable carbon), Ch/Cf and Ca/Cf (carbon content of the polyphenols component of the fulvic acid fraction/fulvic acid carbon).Extractable organic fractions have some promise as bases of soil classification criteria but their potential is limited at present. The procedures are time-consuming and exacting, and results are not comparable between laboratories. Rigorous standardization of methods and interlaboratory comparisons of data might lead to more useful criteria based on organic matter composition. Key words: Humic acid carbon, fulvic acid carbon, polyphenols carbon, extractable carbon, classification criteria
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
    Description: The objective of this study was to determine changes in N dynamics in an Orthic Black Chernozem as a result of two tillage practices (conventional and zero tillage) using the variations in the natural 15N abundance of different soil-N fractions. After 14 yr, no significant differences in isotope composition of total soil-N between the two tillage practices could be found. However, changes were detected in the natural 15N abundance of the acid-hydrolyzable N and various organo-mineral size fractions which led to useful comparisons of the nature of N under the two systems. The N-content of the hydrolyzable-N fraction was similar at the 0- to 4- and 8- to 16-cm depth under both tillage practices, while it was significantly different at the 4- to 8-cm depth. The δa15N of this fraction was consistently higher than that of total soil N at all depths only under zero tillage. This was associated with the presence of more labile N compounds under zero tillage. No differences in the isotopic composition of the organomineral size fractions were found at the 0- to 4-cm depth. At the 4- to 8- and 8- to 16-cm depths, the δa15N values of the finer particle size fractions were higher under zero tillage than under conventional tillage. This indicates a more labile nature of the N associated with these size fractions under zero tillage. Key words: δa15N, conventional tillage, zero tillage, total N, acid-hydrolyzable fraction, particle size fractions
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: A soil water budget model which accounted for a nearly impermeable layer in the profile was developed to describe the water content in a non-homogeneous soil-root system. Water uptake by the roots was represented by a sink term which was dependent upon the root distribution, the soil water content and the potential transpiration. The chosen boundary conditions, precipitation, evapotranspiration and a nearly impermeable layer at the bottom of the soil profile approximated those existing in the field. A submodel to calculate interception was included in the model. Data obtained from a field experiment on a clay soil were compared with calculated results for the period 1 May to 30 Sept. 1975. The overall agreement between daily measured and calculated soil water contents was excellent; all calculated values fell within 10% of the measured data. The model also yielded acceptable results in predicting the distribution of soil water through the profile.
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: Clay mineralogy and soil fabric were used to determine processes responsible for development of Luvisolic-like characteristics in some soils of the upper subalpine subzone in the central Rocky Mountains of Alberta. Evaluation by particle size distribution through the profile was complicated by the presence of a silty surficial deposit overlying a texturally heterogenous calcareous till of the study area. Direct observation, in thin section, of apparent illuvial clay revealed its abundance to be relatively low and its distribution to be unlike that found within illuvial horizons of Gray Luvisols elsewhere in Canada. Both pedogenesis and nature of parent material influenced the mineralogy of the clay-sized fraction. Comparison of the clay suites of the argillic-like horizons with those of the significantly different overlying material provided further evidence that contemporary lessivage was largely inconsequential. A combination of processes is hypothesized to have contributed to the anomalous morphologies of these soils. These include the dissolution and removal of primary carbonate from the solum, geomorphic influences and the in situ reorganization of plasmic material within the till.
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 1981-08-01
    Description: The results of a urea hydrolysis study conducted at 2 and 12 °C using a silt soil indicated that there was no effect of the nitrification inhibitors ATC (4-amino-1,2,4-triazole) and N-Serve [2-chloro-6-(trichloromethyl) pyridine] on urea hydrolysis at 2 or 20 times the recommended application rate. The rate of hydrolysis at 2 °C was about half that at 12 °C, suggesting that leaching of urea might occur following its application to a cold soil. However, use of nitrification inhibitors should not increase leaching of urea.
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: Field studies were conducted on three southwestern Quebec soils for 2 yr to provide information on effects of S fertilization on barley growth, to examine any S-P interaction, and to assess contributions of S from rain during the growing season. The treatments were arranged in a factorial combination of four levels of S (0, 15.6 or 31.2, 62.4 and 93.6 kg S/ha) with three levels of P (0, 117 and 234 kg P2O5/ha) added as gypsum and triple superphosphate, respectively. The results showed that added S either had an inconsistent effect or no effect on barley yield on the experimental soils. The lack of response was attributed to annual S additions from rain estimated to be in excess of 10 kg S∙ha−1∙yr−1, as well as high levels of available S in the soils. No S-P interaction was observed, indicating that high P fertilization should not result in S deficiencies for barley in southwestern Quebec.
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 1981-08-01
    Description: Thermistors were incorporated in stainless steel tubular probes and in CPVC epoxy-filled pioe for accurate periodic and continuous in situ measurements of temperature in organic soil. Temperature can be measured with ± 0.1 °C with portable analog meters and ± 0.01 °C with digital meters.
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 1981-08-01
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: The persistence of the herbicide diclofop-methyl, methyl 2-(4-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)) phenoxy)propionate, was measured in two soils under field conditions in southwestern Ontario. The hydrolysis of the herbicide ester to its corresponding acid, diclofop, 2-(4-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)phenoxy)propionic acid, was slower at pH 5.5 than at higher pH but soil pH had no effect on subsequent degradation of diclofop or metabolites formed. After hydrolysis of the ester the acid degraded to 12–39% of the original concentration in 34 days and less than 14% of the applied herbicide, identified as diclofop, was recovered at the end of the growing season. During the course of the degradation small amounts of the metabolites 4-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)phenol and 4-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)phenetole were identified from their relative retention time (Rf) on silica gel plates along with traces of other nonidentified compounds. None of the identifiable products except diclofop was present at the last sampling date. Combustion of soils treated with 14C-diclofop-methyl revealed 26–32% of the radioactivity was not extracted at the end of the growing season. Key words: Hoegrass, diclofop degradation, soil residue, soil reaction, 14C-diclofop-methyl
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 1984-02-01
    Description: Cool soil temperature regimes with initial soil temperatures of 5 °C rising to 20 °C at the heading stage reduced the rate of growth of barley by approximately one-third compared to 15–25 °C but did not change the barley yield or the fate of the applied fertilizer N in the soil biomass, roots, or tops of the plant or that lost by denitrification. The primary isotope data, % Ndff or ’A’ values remained relatively constant irrespective of whether the straw was placed on the surface or mixed throughout the soil. In contrast, the nitrogen balance data verified that fertilizer N loss, presumably due to denitrification, was as high as 35% in certain treatments, and further that up to 40% of the added fertilizer N was immobilized where the straw was uniformly mixed in the soil. The nitrogen balance data were used to correct the original rate of fertilizer N application. When this was done, A values calculated on the basis of the revised rates of application showed that the amount of soil N which was denitrified or immobilized was approximately double that of the applied fertilizer N. Thus, it is possible where a N balance is included in an investigation to quantitatively assess the effect of management practices on available soil N. It is further concluded that differential immobilization or denitrification of the 15N fertilizer standard may invalidate yield-dependent isotope-derived data, such as dinitrogen fixation unless nitrogen balance data are available to permit the appropriate corrections to be made. Key words: Zero till, N-cycle, temperature, crop residues, barley
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: The soil family was used to describe soil map units in an intermediate level survey of British Columbia. The main obstacle to its application was determination of soil climate. Soil climate (soil temperature classes and soil moisture subclasses) was derived from atmospheric climate data. It was then related to climax forest vegetation which was used to locate map unit boundaries. By linking biological characteristics to the soil survey, interpretations for wildlife and forestry were enhanced. At the level in which the survey was conducted, the soil family usefully reflected the soil variation in the landscape while providing ample information for most land use interpretations.
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: Because different sources were being utilized to meet fertilizer Mg guarantees in the Atlantic Area, the availability of Mg to ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) and the effect on soil test levels of four Mg sources were evaluated at two soil pH levels over five harvests in a greenhouse experiment. At equivalent rates of applied Mg (50 ppm) the availability ranked as follows based on total Mg uptake: MgSO4 〉 Sul-Po-Mag 〉 ground dolomitic limestone 〉 coarse dolomitic grits = check soil. Soil pH had no apparent effect on relative availabilities of the sources. Limestone applied at a rate to equal 240 ppm Mg supplied more plant-available Mg than any other source and, as well, maintained the highest soil test level over all five harvests. Coarse dolomitic grits exhibited no value as a plant-available Mg source.
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: A comparison of the drop-cone penetrometer and Casagrande methods for determining the liquid limit of soils showed that the former method is simpler, faster and provides more precise results. Key words: Casagrande, drop-cone penetrometer, liquid limit, soil survey
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
    Description: A case study is presented to illustrate how factor analysis can be used to quantify probable causes of physical and chemical forest-floor variability. Twenty forest-floor variables were examined for a 30 × 30-m sampling plot located within a mature, naturally regenerated conifer stand. "Slough" (the degree of accumulation of decayed stumps, logs, branches, etc.), litter (hardwood- vs. softwood-type in terms of base-status) and insolation (degree of canopy closure) factors appeared to underlie the observed variability pattern. Factor identification was facilitated by the following variable association pattern: (i) total C with total Fe, Al, N, P, K; (ii) total C with LFH-mass and thickness; (iii) water-extractable P with 2 N potassium-chloride-extractable NH4-H; (iv) total and 1 N ammonium-acetate-extractable Ca with pH; and (v) ground cover vegetation density with forest floor moisture content and thickness. Key words: Forest floor, lateral variability, factor analysis
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
    Description: Coarse and finely ground samples from Chernozemic and Luvisolic soils were heated for 2 h at temperatures ranging from 150 to 1150 °C prior to analysis for total As. Thermal pretreatment at temperatures of 150 to 750 °C increased the measured levels of As in all A and B and in some C horizon samples. Heating at 550 °C caused as much as a twofold increase in levels detected in some A horizons. Initial net loss of As through volatilization occurred for all samples starting at pretreatment temperatures of 750 °C and ending at 850 to 1000 °C. Following this initial loss, measured levels of As generally increased with further heating. Heating soils at 1100 °C and higher then caused nearly complete volatilization of As from all Ah horizon samples. Samples of B and C horizons heated at 1150 °C contained from 30% more to 80% less than the content in air-dried samples. Grinding had no significant effect on As measurements. The thermal dependence of As measurements is discussed in terms of forms of the element, mineral transformations, and efficacy of the HCl digestion procedure. Key words: Arsenic analysis, soil arsenic, form of arsenic, trace elements, arsenic geochemistry, methods of analysis
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
    Description: This study examines the development costs of underground service installation in relation to various land factor constraints. Records from municipal development projects were found to be inadequate for apportioning development costs. Professional judgment from full-time cost estimators was found to be more useful. Although development costs on marginal agricultural lands are somewhat higher than on good quality lands, these additional costs are minimal when compared to the total investment in a development project. Key words: Soil interpretations, capability, land preservation, development costs
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 1984-08-01
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 1984-11-01
    Description: Two non-replicated, unfertilized, dryland grain rotations—continuous wheat and wheat-fallow — were established in 1912 on a Dark Brown Chernozemic soil in southern Alberta. The effect of long-term cropping on the monosaccharide distribution in the hydrolysates of the water-stable aggregates was assessed. Although all the hydrolysates of the aggregates had the same suite of monosaccharides, the relative proportions changed with cultivation. The eight monosaccharides identified represented between 92 and 96% of the total GC detector response. The monosaccharide C of aggregate organic C for the native prairie varied from 6.9 to 7.6%, while for the continuous wheat and the wheat and fallow of the wheat-fallow rotation it varied from 3.6 to 5.5%, from 1.8 to 5.1%, and from 1.6 to 6.7%, respectively; the higher percentages were associated with the larger aggregate fractions. Except for galactose, the average relative proportions of the monosaccharides identified in the hydrolysates of the water-stable aggregates were not much different from those reported in the literature for the hydrolysates of whole soils. Key words: Monosaccharides, aggregate fractions, water-stable aggregates, capillary gas chromatography, long-term rotation
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: The effects on soil properties of long-term potato cultivation and of erosion were studied by sampling soils along three transects in virgin forest sites and seven transects in potato fields with landforms and parent materials similar to those of the forest sites. The average thickness of solum was reduced from 35 cm in virgin forest to 27 cm in cultivated fields. More than 90% (28 of 30) of forested pedons were classified as Podzolic soils but only 27% (19 of 70) of the cultivated pedons met all of the criteria of Podzolic soils. The others were mainly Regosols and Brunisols. The main criterion that excluded the soils from the Podzolic order was one of the morphological criteria which states "… hue of 10 YR near the upper boundary (of B horizon) and becomes yellower with depth." Most of the Ap horizons (70%) still meet all the chemical criteria for the Podzolic order. By waiving the morphological criterion stated above for the cultivated sites, nearly 70% (48 of 70) of the soils observed remained as Podzols with only a minor amount of Regosols and Brunisols. It is proposed that the current morphological criterion should be retained for uncultivated soils, but waived for cultivated soils. This will decrease the contrast between the classification of cultivated and adjacent forest soils. We also suggested that the morphological changes resulting from cultivation and erosion can be dealt with at a lower categorocal level or as a phase of categorical levels. Key words: Chemical criteria, morphological criteria, soil erosion, soil transect
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 1984-04-01
    Description: Soil profiles on the lake bottom and on four successive postglacial lacustrine terraces situated on the edge of Ear Lake in west-central Saskatchewan were studied to contribute to the knowledge of processes associated with environments of soil formation since deglaciation. Detailed morphological studies and radiocarbon dates of selected horizons indicated incipient and well-developed paleosols have formed in response to progressive formation of the terraces. The ages of the paleosols revealed a possible relationship between postglacial climatic fluctuation and the formation of these terraces. Buried soils on the lower terraces meet the criteria for Solonetzic soils while surface soils of the upper terraces have Solonetzic characteristics. The study showed the presence of soils which have characteristics reflecting more than one interval of horizon differentiation and led to the suggestion that it may be erroneous to relate their properties solely to prevailing environmental conditions. Key words: 14C dates, terrace formation, soil age, Holocene soils, paleosol, Solonetzic soil
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 1981-02-01
    Description: Crop uptake of the major cations from the soil solution depends not only on their absolute amounts but also on their quantitative relationships. The risk of accentuating nutrient deficiencies through unbalanced cation ratios arising from injudicious fertilization practices is particularly high in the poorly buffered, continuously cropped/fertilized savannah soils of Nigeria. This paper evaluates the preliminary results of a long-term investigation of the effects of continuous fertilization on soil cation ratios, crop nutrition and yield in northern Nigeria. The effects of nine factorial combinations of three levels (0, 25 and 50 kg∙ha−1) each of K and Mg (applied in 1976) are being monitored on two soils — Dystric Nitosol or Oxisol (at Mokwa) and Ferric Luvisol or Ultisol (at Yandev) using maize (Zea mays L.) as a test crop. Soil and index leaf K, Ca and Mg concentrations were related to yield by means of correlation and regression analyses. Maize yields were strongly and negatively related to soil exchangeable K, and percent in plant tissue, and highly significantly and positively correlated with percent Ca in plant tissue, soil Ca:K and (Ca + Mg):K ratios. It is thus evident that K depressed yields by creating unfavorable soil Ca:K, (Ca + Mg):K ratios, and to a lesser degree, Mg:K ratios through its repressive action on these two other cations. The results have demonstrated the practical significance of the inverse Ca-K relationship in crop nutrition with respect to the Nigerian savannah soils and have also shown the fragile nature of the balance between the major cations and how easily the balance can be upset by injudicious fertilizer use and management. This calls for caution in the development of fertilizer programs for the area. Use of fertilizers containing a high Ca concentration is suggested.
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Description: Twenty-four, 15-cm-long soil columns were leached with a solution containing 2100 ppm Na and 2000 ppm Ca as NaCl and CaCl2, respectively. Half the columns were gravity-drained, the other half were drained under a pressure of 0.36 kg/cm2. The columns were frozen in a deep freeze, the equivalent to 6 cm of the original leaching solution was frozen on top of the columns, and the columns were then allowed to thaw. The initial 30% of the meltwater had a higher salt content and a higher SAR than the original solution, while the reverse was true for the last 70% of the melt. The infiltrating meltwater lowered EC and SAR of the top half of the soil columns. Differences were relatively small between four treatments in which the ice melted while the soil thawed, but these four treatments gave better leaching than the treatment in which the ice melted on a pre-thawed soil column. The results suggest that freeze-purification of saline drain water can be used in two ways for the reclamation of saline soils: (a) the initial melt could be collected and disposed of, while the later meltwater is used for leaching; or (b) all meltwater could be allowed to infiltrate into the soil resulting in a procedure similar to the high-salt-water dilution method of reclaiming saline soils.
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