Net mineralization was measured in free-draining and poorly drained pasture soils using three different field incubation
methodologies. Two involved the use of enclosed incubation vessels (jar or box) containing C
2H
2 as a nitrification inhibitor. The third method confined soil cores in situ in an open tube in the ground, with an anion-exchange
resin at the base to retain leached NO
3
– (resin-core technique, RCT). Measurements were made on three occasions on three free-draining pastures of different ages
and contrasting organic matter contents. In general, rates of net mineralization increased with pasture age and organic matter
content (range: 0.5–1.5 kg N ha
–1 day
–1) and similar rates were obtained between the three techniques for a particular pasture. Coefficients of variation (CVs) were
generally high (range: 10.4–98.5%), but the enclosed incubation methods were rather less variable than the RCT and were considered
overall to be the more reliable. The RCT did not include C
2H
2 and, therefore, newly formed NO
3
– may have been lost through denitrification. In a poorly drained pasture soil, there were discrepancies between the two enclosed
methods, especially when the soil water content approached field capacity. The interpretation of the incubation measurements
in relation to the flux of N through the soil inorganic N pool is discussed and the drawbacks of the various methodologies
are evaluated.
Key words Net nitrogen mineralization - Field incubation - Soil water - Soil cores
Received: 18 November 1999