• Home
  • Agriculture
  • Fishing and aquaculture
  • Forests
  • Minerals and petroleum
  • About us and our services
A-Z INDEX | SEARCH | CONTACT US
New South Wales Department of Primary Industries subsite home
Home »  Agriculture  »  Drought, bushfire and emergencies  »  Drought  »  Drought recovery  » 

Drought

Soil-nitrate after drought

information sheet
Released/reviewed: Dec 2006

Rainfall events do occur during droughts. Whilst these events may not be of sufficient intensity and occurrence to wet the profile for sowing a crop, they appear to be enough for microbial-induced mineralisation. While mineralisation occurs in a burst of activity, the cumulative effect is a soil rich in nitrate.

Key points discussed include:

  • Soil-nitrate increases following a drought.
  • Enough rain falls during a drought for mineralisation to occur.
  • After drought, soil sampling is the most reliable method for determining soil-nitrate levels.
  • To determine a fertiliser rate, soil-nitrate levels need to be balanced with target yield and protein.
Download
PDF icon Soil-nitrate after drought - Full version
 57.0 kb
Downloads require Adobe Acrobat Reader
  • Drought assistance
  • Managing in drought
  • Current drought situation
  • Planning to handle drought
  • Drought recovery
  • Lessons learnt from drought
Privacy | Legal | Report a problem
© State of New South Wales, 2005 | ServiceNSW