
Soybean profitability and yield component response to nitrogen fertilizer in Iowa
Author(s) -
Córdova S. Carolina,
Archontoulis Sotirios V.,
Licht Mark A.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
agrosystems, geosciences and environment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2639-6696
DOI - 10.1002/agg2.20092
Subject(s) - fertilizer , sowing , agronomy , yield (engineering) , nitrogen , biomass (ecology) , nitrogen fertilizer , mathematics , zoology , chemistry , biology , materials science , organic chemistry , metallurgy
Nitrogen fertilizer application to soybean [ Glycine max (L.) Merr.] in Iowa, USA, has shown inconsistent results. We performed a study in central Iowa (2015 and 2016) to investigate the effect of N fertilizer rate (0, 45, 90, 135 kg N ha −1 ) and application timing (planting, flowering, pod setting) on soybean yield, yield components, and to calculate the economic net return to N fertilizer. Results showed a positive effect of N fertilizer on soybean yield and yield components both years. Seed and aboveground biomass dry weight were positively correlated to N fertilizer, and both were 17% greater than No‐N treatment. Nitrogen fertilizer rate that significantly increased seed and aboveground biomass was 135 kg N ha −1 regardless of application timing (2015), or at planting (2016). Moreover, the same N fertilizer addition applied at planting benefitted seed and aboveground biomass N accumulation only in 2016 (avg. 32.00 and 34.68 g N uptake m −2 , respectively), both 1.5‐times higher than No‐N treatment. Favorable environmental conditions during 2016 lead to hand‐measured yield difference of 22% compared to 2015. Economic net return analysis showed that the additional revenue from increased yield attributed to supplemental N fertilization offset the application cost, resulting in net return gains between US$5.83 to $281.89 ha −1 (all treatments except 45 kg N ha −1 on 2015). This study highlights the importance to parse out soybean yield in its components, and the need to quantify yield gains from N fertilizer additions in economic terms which shed some light on any tradeoffs.