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      Release of sulfur from rice residues under flooded and non-flooded soil conditions

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      Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
      CSIRO Publishing

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          Abstract

          Increased rice cropping intensity, due to shorter maturity varieties and shorter turn around times between crops, has lead to an increase in burning of rice straw. This can have significant short and long term effects on the productivity of the rice cropping system. A glasshouse experiment was conducted using an Aquic Haplustalf soil to study the release of S from different rice residues (straw and ash) under different water management conditions (non-flooded and flooded), and with and without the addition of S fertilizer. Rice straw residues (0.086 and 0.108%S) and ash produced from them (0.168 and 0.374%S), labelled with 35S, were used to investigate the importance of residue form and residue S concentration for the release of S. A loss of approximately 60% of the S from low-S straw and 40% from high-S straw was recorded on burning. The results showed that the addition of 6 kg S ha-1 as gypsum significantly increased grain yield across treatments. The addition of gypsum resulted in an increased S release from high-S straw residue under non-flooded conditions as measured by plant uptake, suggesting a priming effect of gypsum on S release from residues. The incorporation of straw and ash resulted in significantly increased grain yield in some but not all treatments. The percentage recovery of S in plants was higher in ash than in straw treated soil, but since S had been lost during burning, the absolute amount recovered (soil+plant) was higher in straw than in ash-treated soil. The 35S data indicate that if there is a critical S level for mineralization of rice straw, this level is less than the 0.086% in the residues used in this experiment.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
          Aust. J. Agric. Res.
          CSIRO Publishing
          0004-9409
          1994
          1994
          : 45
          : 3
          : 657
          Article
          10.1071/AR9940657
          568045bb-4703-4761-9475-156861799448
          © 1994
          History

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