Residual Soil Nitrate: A Comparison between Air-Dried and Field-Moist Soil Samples.
                            In the framework of the European nitrate directive (91/676/EEG), losses of nitrate
(NO3)– nitrogen (N) to both surface and groundwater are limited to 50 mg/l. Because
the residual NO3-N in the soil profile after harvest is considered the main determinant
of nitrate leaching during wintertime, the Flemish government imposed a limit value of
90 kg NO3-N ha−1 up to a soil depth of 90 cm between 1 October and 15 November.
This study compared two different soil sample preparation methodologies. When samples
were analyzed immediately upon arrival, no differences in NO3-N concentration
were observed. However, although field-moist samples are maintained at 4 ◦C, nitrification
is not completely stopped, as indicated by the increased NO3-N concentration
in field-moist samples 10 days after storage at 4 ◦C . In contrast, nitrification in air–
dried samples is stopped during the oven drying when 40 ◦C is reached. Moreover, the
reproducibility was significantly greater in air-dried samples as compared to field-moist
samples.
                        
                        Auteur(s):
                            Vandendriessche H., Van Neck T., Bijnens O., Elsen A.
                        Nombre de pages:
                            
                        Date de parution:
                            2011
                        