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General Agriculture for Competitive Exams for UPCATET PG / TGT, PGT / TA, STA etc.
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    Nitrification Inhibitors

    These are chemicals that slow down the conversion of ammonium (NH₄⁺) to nitrate (NO₃⁻) by inhibiting nitrifying bacteria (e.g., Nitrosomonas). Used With: Ammonia, Ammonium salts, Urea

    Types Based on Land Conditions:

    For Lowland:

    Inhibitor

    Formula

    N Content (%)

    Properties

    Oxamide

    NH₂COCONH₂

    31

    Not hygroscopic; sol. = 0.4g/L

    Dicyandiamide (DD)

    NH₂C(=NH)NHCN

    42

    Stable and effective

    Thiourea (TU)

    SC(NH₂)₂

    36.8

    Multifunctional compound

    Urea Pyrolyzate

    48

    Slow release

    For Upland:

    • AM: 2-amino-4-chloro-6-methyl pyrimidine
    • N-Serve: 2-chloro-6-trichloromethyl pyridine

    Others: ASU (Guanyl thiourea), Nitrapyrin, Sulphathiazole (ST), DCS, ATC, Neem Cake (eco-friendly)

     

     

    1. Slow Release Fertilizers; These are designed to release nutrients gradually to minimize leaching and loss.

    A. Chemically Less Soluble Compounds:

    Fertilizer

    N Content (%)

    Notes

    Isobutylidene Diurea (IBDU)

    31–32

    Slow hydrolysis

    Crotonylidene Diurea (CDU)

    32.5

    Solubility controlled by pH

    Guanyl Urea Sulphate (GUS)

    Urea Formaldehyde (UF)

    38–42

    Less hygroscopic than urea

    Oxamide

    31

    Dual use: nitrification inhibitor & slow release

    Coated Urea:

    • Sulphur-coated urea
    • Neem-coated urea (also acts as insect repellent)
    • Lac/shellac-coated urea (34.2% N)

     

    Modified Forms:

    • Super granules/briquettes (1–4 g each)
    • Placed in reduced soil zones to minimize volatilization

     

    1. Biofertilizers / Microbial Inoculants

    Definition: Preparations containing live or latent microorganisms (e.g., N-fixers, P-solubilizers, decomposers) that promote nutrient availability.

    Types of Applications:

    (a) Seed Inoculants:

    • Moong, Arhar, Lentil: 500g Rhizobium/ha (2.5 packets)
    • Groundnut: 1.5 kg/ha (7.5 packets)
    • Soybean, Bengal gram: 1 kg/ha (5 packets)

    (b) Soil Inoculants: 2 kg Azotobacter or Azospirillum mixed with 25 kg FYM + 25 kg soil per ha

    Benefits:

    • Fix 50–200 kg N/ha/year
    • Leave 40–80 kg residual N
    • Produce plant hormones (IAA, GA, NAA)
    • Act as bio-pesticides (through antibiotics)
    • Improve soil structure, fertility, water-holding

     

    1. Biological Nitrogen Fixation (BNF)

    Definition: Natural process where atmospheric nitrogen (N₂) is converted to ammonia by certain microorganisms.

    Source

    Nitrogen Fixed (kg/ha/year)

    Legumes

    150–250

    Actinomycetes

    50–150

    Beans

    30–50

    Algae (Nostoc)

    10–20

     

    (a) Symbiotic Fixation

    • With Legumes (Rhizobium spp.)

    Rhizobium Species

    Host Plant Genus

    R. meliloti

    Medicago, Trigonella

    R. trifolii

    Trifolium

    R. leguminosarum

    Peas, Vetch, Lentil

    R. phaseoli

    Beans

    R. lupini

    Lupine, Serradella

    R. japonicum

    Soybean, Cowpea, Groundnut, Crotalaria

    • Key protein: Leghaemoglobin — protects Nitrogenase by regulating O₂.
    • N-fixation example: Lucerne > 250 kg N/ha

     

    With Non-legumes (Frankia in actinomycetes); Found in Casuarina, Alnus, Myrica

     

    (b) Non-Nodular Symbiosis

    • Azolla–Anabaena azollae: Fixes 30–40 kg N/ha
    • Thrives in pH 5.5–7.0; temp. 20–30°C
    • Nursery size: 4m × 2m × 30–40 cm

     

    (c) Non-Symbiotic Fixation

    (i) Heterotrophic Bacteria:

    Bacteria

    Optimum pH

    Note

    Azotobacter

    6.5–8.0

    Aerobic, rice/sugarcane

    Beijerinckia

    5.0–9.0

    Tropical tolerant

    Clostridium

    5.0–9.0

    Anaerobic

    Fix ~5–20 kg N/ha/year

    (ii) Autotrophic Microorganisms:

    • Rhodospirillum (anaerobic photosynthetic)
    • Blue-green algae (Nostoc, Anabaena, Aulosira, etc.)

     

    Key Points for Exams:

    • Rhizobium is aerobic, but nitrogenase is inactivated by O₂, hence protected by leghaemoglobin.
    • Azolla can be dual cropped in rice systems and acts as green manure.
    • Blue-Green Algae (BGA) add 20–25 kg N/ha in lowland paddy fields.
    • Neem-coated urea is a slow-release nitrogen source and acts as nitrification inhibitor + insecticide.
    • Azotobacter is best suited for non-legumes like maize, sugarcane.

     

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