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Original Articles

Short‐Term Effect of Targeted Placements of Sheep Excrement on Grassland in Inner Mongolia on Soil and Plant Parameters

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Pages 1589-1604 | Received 14 Apr 2006, Accepted 27 Jul 2006, Published online: 06 Jun 2007
 

Abstract

Grazing animal excrement plays an important role in nutrient cycling and redistribution in grazing ecosystems, due to grazing in large areas and return in small areas. To elucidate the changes to the soil and pasture caused by sheep urine, fresh dung, and compost patches, a short‐term field experiment using artificially placed pats was set up in the autumn of 2003 in the Inner Mongolian steppe. Urine application significantly increased soil pH during the first 32 days in soil layers at depths of both 0–5 cm and 5–15 cm. Rapid hydrolysis of urea gave large amounts of urine‐nitrogen (N) as ammonium (NH4 +) in soil extracts and was followed by apparent nitrification from day 2. Higher inorganic N content in the urine‐treated soil was found throughout the experiment compared with the control. No significant effects of sheep excrement on soil microbial carbon (C) and soil microbial N was found, but microbial activities significantly increased compared with the control after application of sheep excrement. Forty‐six percent of dung‐N and 27% of compost‐N were transferred into vegetation after the experiment. The results from this study suggest that large amounts of nutrients have been lost from the returned excrement patches in the degraded grassland of Inner Mongolia, especially from sheep urine‐N.

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by the Key Program of Chinese National Natural Science Foundation Commission (90211017) and the Key Project of Knowledge Innovation of Chinese Academy of Sciences (KSCX2‐SW‐107).

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