
Nitrogen Fertilizer and Residue Management in Dryland No‐Till Hard Red Spring Wheat
Author(s) -
Walsh Olga S.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
agrosystems, geosciences and environment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2639-6696
DOI - 10.2134/age2019.09.0077
Subject(s) - agronomy , nitrogen , residue (chemistry) , field experiment , grain yield , mulch , crop residue , fertilizer , environmental science , mathematics , biology , chemistry , agriculture , ecology , biochemistry , organic chemistry
Core Ideas Nitrogen may enhance wheat grain quality even when wheat yield is not increased. Nitrogen rate and placement had greater effect on grain protein than wheat yield. Side‐banding N resulted in higher grain protein than broadcasting. Residue management had no effect on wheat production. This article summarizes the results from a 1‐yr field experiment conducted at two locations in northcentral Montana. Nutrient and residue management are important aspects of dryland no‐till cropping systems that directly affect wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.) production. The objectives were to assess N response of hard red spring wheat grown in dryland no‐till conditions under varied crop residue management. The effects of N application rate (0, 135, and 270 kg N ha −1 ) and placement (broadcast vs. side‐banded) and residue management (undisturbed vs. removed) on biomass weight and N content, Normalized Difference Vegetative Index (NDVI), grain yield, grain test weight, and protein content of hard red spring wheat were evaluated. At one of two locations, the 135 kg N ha −1 rate resulted in significantly higher yield, compared with unfertilized check, but further increase of N rate to 270 kg N ha −1 did not improve yield. There was no response of grain yield to N application rate at the second location. At one of two locations, the side‐dress N application resulted in higher wheat yield, but no statistically significant differences in yield associated with N placement was observed at the second location. Biomass N content and grain protein content were significantly affected by the N application rate at both locations. The results of this study confirm that even if wheat grain yields are not always increased with N applications, N fertilizer could still be beneficial in terms of improved grain quality (test weight and protein content).