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                                       Details for article 2 of 183 found articles
 
 
  A comparison of laboratory, greenhouse, and field indicators of nitrogen availability
 
 
Title: A comparison of laboratory, greenhouse, and field indicators of nitrogen availability
Author: Michrina, B. P.
Fox, R. H.
Piekielek, W. P.
Appeared in: Communications in soil science and plant analysis
Paging: Volume 12 (1981) nr. 6 pages 519-535
Year: 1981
Contents: In the past, greenhouse and field results have been used individually to test the predictive capacity of laboratory indexes of soil nitrogen availability. The field results are the most reliable measure of field available N, but greenhouse experiments can be conducted more easily and over the whole year. A comparison of the laboratory, greenhouse and field indicators of N availability was therefore needed to determine if greenhouse data could be substituted for field results in this capacity. In a study of ten Pennsylvania soils there was no significant correlation between field relative N uptake and greenhouse relative N uptake which suggested that greenhouse results could not be substituted for field results in testing the reliability of laboratory indexes. There was no significant correlation between the field results and the five laboratory indexes tested (total N, total organic matter, Fox-Piekielek Test, MacLean Test, and Keeney-Bremner Test). However, the latter three tests did correlate with the field relative N uptake when one of the soils was deleted from analysis. All five laboratory indexes were significantly correlated with greenhouse relative N uptake. Total organic matter content of the soil would explain 72% of the variation in greenhouse relative N uptake and only 23% of the field relative N uptake.
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 2 of 183 found articles
 
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