Abstract
The amounts of non-exchangeable or fixed NH4+ in six soils from southern New South Wales were determined by using three methods. Using a potassium hydroxide pretreatment 2-13 % of the total nitrogen in the surface soils was fixed and between 16 and 33 % in the subsoils. Different methods showed up to a threefold difference in the amount on some soils and non-significant differences in others. The interpretation of the part played by this fraction of soil nitrogen in the chemical and biological equilibrium of soil must be qualified according to the extraction method used. The use of soil samples having a larger particle size (< 2 mm) than previously used (<0.147 mm) was found to be adequate with the soils studied. As the present definition of non-exchangeable or fixed NH4+ is misleading, it is proposed that this fraction of soil nitrogen be called intercalary ammonium (NH4+). Intercalary NH4+ is defined as that nitrogen recovered from within clay minerals by hydrofluoric-hydrochloric acid treatment, subsequent to a potassium hydroxide or potassium hypobromite/potassium hydroxide pretreatment and 0 . 5N potassium chloride leaching to remove exchangeable NH4+ and organic nitrogen from the outside of the clay particles.