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Effects of husbandry treatments on nitrogen concentration of grain and related yields in winter‐wheat experiments made in South‐East England
Author(s) -
Benzian Blanche,
Lane Peter
Publication year - 1982
Publication title -
journal of the science of food and agriculture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.782
H-Index - 142
eISSN - 1097-0010
pISSN - 0022-5142
DOI - 10.1002/jsfa.2740331103
Subject(s) - loam , arable land , agronomy , crop , animal husbandry , crop rotation , manure , monocropping , cropping , mathematics , environmental science , biology , agriculture , soil water , ecology , soil science
Experiments by Rothamsted staff over 20 years show that N (protein) concentration in wheat grain is influenced considerably by several husbandry treatments other than total fertiliser N. Even small differences can be of practical importance if values lie close to the minimum standard for bread wheat. In 15 experiments which tested timing of fertiliser N, an extra 60 kg ha −1 would have been needed in autumn to increase grain‐N concentration by 0.1% on average, but only 43 kg in early and 30 kg in late spring. The response to autumn N was similar in a ley‐arable rotation experiment Fertiliser N applied to a previous potato crop gave a grain‐N% increase equivalent to a quarter of the fresh application on a silty clay loam soil but none on a sandy loam. Cumulative annual dressings of farmyard manure benefited grain‐N% as did residues from FYM applied to a previous potato crop, which gave increases equivalent to those from 16 kg ha −1 of fresh fertiliser N. In ley‐arable rotation experiments, wheat after arable cropping did not reach bread‐quality standard with the largest amount of fertiliser N (150 kg ha −1 ), but after lucerne N% values exceeded the threshold value of 2.14% N with all rates. Benefits from lucerne and a grass‐clover ley were still considerable when wheat was grown as a second test crop after potatoes. Yield responses to these husbandry treatments tended to be small and positive, except that in the presence of larger dosager of fertiliser N farmyard manure sometimes caused a depression.

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