Between November 1991 and 1993, 4 consecutive vegetable crops (sweetcorn,
cabbage, potato, and cabbage) were grown in Lincoln, New Zealand. The
treatments included spent mushroom substrate (SMS, a by-product of the
mushroom industry) applications before each crop at rates of 0, 20, 40, or 80
t/ha (moist), both with and without 1 rate of inorganic fertiliser for
each crop (120-338, 40-100, 53-100, and 60-114 kg/ha, respectively, of
nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, and sulfur). SMS applications caused a rapid
increase in soil inorganic N concentration, but after this it had a variable
effect. There was some evidence of N immobilisation following initial SMS
applications of 20 t/ha. SMS applications increased both soil pH and CEC,
whereas inorganic fertiliser decreased both. Sweetcorn and cabbage yields were
increased by SMS when inorganic fertiliser was not used, and potato yield was
increased irrespective of fertiliser use (i.e. yield increases of 38%,
82-96%, and 26-46%, respectively, for sweetcorn cob, cabbage
head, and potato tuber fresh yields). Inorganic fertiliser increased crop
yields by a greater amount than SMS. A lack of soil inorganic N was the major
limitation to crop growth following SMS applications, so crops may require
additional N with SMS.