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Articles

Coating of essential oils onto prilled urea retards its nitrification in soil

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Pages 96-105 | Received 26 Apr 2015, Accepted 28 Apr 2016, Published online: 17 May 2016
 

ABSTRACT

Increased use of nitrogenous fertilizers in agriculture has led to the increased pollution of ground water and atmosphere. Certain plant products can be used as coating materials onto urea to reduce the N losses. We evaluated the effectiveness of citronella and palmarosa grass oils as nitrification inhibitors in a soil incubation study. The treatments (14) were combinations of 4 N sources (neem, citronella and palmarosa oil coated prilled ureas, and uncoated prilled urea), 2 coating thicknesses of oils (500 and 1000 mg kg−1) and 2 N levels (75 and 150 kg N ha−1), replicated thrice in a randomized block design. N levels at 75 and 150 kg ha−1 were equivalent to 34 and 68 mg N kg−1 soil, respectively. Results showed that N sources citronella (CCPU1000) and neem oil (NCPU1000) coated prilled ureas at 1000 mg kg−1 coating thickness with 75 kg ha−1 released similar amount of ammonical-N to uncoated prilled urea at 150 kg N ha−1, suggesting the beneficial effect of coated ureas. The highest nitrification inhibition (%) was recorded with NCPU1000, the reference nitrification inhibitor, which was significantly greater to all the other N sources at 7 days after incubation (DAI), and at par to CCPU1000 at 14 and 21 DAI.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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