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Late‐Season Nitrogen Increases Improver Common and Durum Wheat Quality
Author(s) -
Blandino Massimo,
Vaccino Patrizia,
Reyneri Amedeo
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
agronomy journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.752
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1435-0645
pISSN - 0002-1962
DOI - 10.2134/agronj14.0405
Subject(s) - agronomy , loam , anthesis , human fertilization , cultivar , soil water , growing season , ammonium nitrate , leaching (pedology) , biology , fertilizer , nitrogen , chemistry , ecology , organic chemistry
The foliar N application at a low rate is a strategy that could be applied by farmers in substitution to the traditional late soil application when there are restrictions on N distribution. The aim of this study was to compare the effect of late‐season N fertilization strategies on wheat ( Triticum spp.) quality. Field experiments were set up in two different soils, in Northwest Italy. The effect of N fertilization was evaluated on two common ( T. aestivum L.) and two durum wheat ( T. turgidum L. var. durum Desf.) cultivars. Late‐season N was soil‐applied (40 kg N ha −1 ) as ammonium nitrate at heading, or foliar sprayed (5 kg N ha −1 ) at flowering, and compared with a control without N fertilization after the vegetative growth stage. Nitrogen soil application increased grain protein content (GPC) (+15%) for both crops. This fertilization strategy led also to higher test weight (+1.4%), kernel hardness (+14%), dough strength (W) (+42%), and lower tenacity/extensibility ratio P/L (–18%) in the common wheat, and to a lower yellowberry percentage in the durum wheat (–29%). The strategy to apply a foliar N fertilizer at anthesis at a lower rate, although it has a greater cost effectiveness, led to a less effective bread‐ or pasta‐making quality enhancement, with an average increase of GPC and W only in the silt loam soil by 5 and 18%, respectively. This strategy could lead to more successful increase of GPC in soils with a probable lower nitrate leaching during the vegetative stages.