Litcius/Paper detail

In-Soil Application of NP Mineral Fertilizer as a Method of Improving Nitrogen Yielding Efficiency

Piotr Szulc, Przemysław Barłóg, Katarzyna Ambroży-Deręgowska, Iwona Mejza, Joanna Kobus‐Cisowska

2020Agronomy18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study presents the results of a four-year field experiment assessing the effectiveness of phosphorus application in maize cultivation according to the depth of two-component fertilizer (NP) placement in the soil layer, type of nitrogen fertilizer and date of application. Nitrogen utilization from mineral fertilizer was low—on average, 37.1% during the four years of research. The nitrogen metabolism index, measuring the agricultural and physiological efficiency of nitrogen use, confirmed the significant impact of NP fertilizer placement at 10 and 5 cm as optimal in maize fertilization. The use of nitrogen in maize cultivation before sowing, compared to the application of this component at the phase of 5-6 leaves BBCH 15/16 stage (stage of leaf development with five–six leaves unfolded), significantly increased the agricultural and physiological effectiveness of nitrogen applied in mineral fertilizer. Ammonium nitrate application before sowing the maize, compared to top dressing at the BBCH 15/16 stage, significantly increased nitrogen uptake and utilization from mineral fertilizer. Date of urea fertilizer application to the soil did not have a significant impact on these indicators in maize cultivation.

Topics & Concepts

FertilizerNitrogenSowingAgronomyAmmonium nitrateNitrogen fertilizerUreaEnvironmental sciencePhosphorusNitrogen deficiencyChemistryBiologyOrganic chemistryCrop Yield and Soil FertilityPlant nutrient uptake and metabolismPlant Micronutrient Interactions and Effects