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Sugarbeet Growth as Affected by Wheat Residues and Nitrogen Fertilization
Author(s) -
Moraghan John T.,
Sims Albert L.,
Smith Larry J.
Publication year - 2003
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/agronj2003.1560
Subject(s) - straw , agronomy , chemistry , sugar , urea , nitrogen , fertilizer , human fertilization , poaceae , field experiment , biology , food science , biochemistry , organic chemistry
Little is known about how low‐N, mature wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.) straw and high‐N, postharvest volunteer wheat growth from the previous year influence N fertilizer requirements for sugarbeet ( Beta vulgaris L.). This 2‐yr field study examined how wheat straw (3.36 and 6.72 Mg ha −1 ; 3.5 g N kg −1 in 2000 and 8.0 g N kg −1 in 2001), preflowering wheat residues (2.1 to 4.2 Mg ha −1 ; 29.1 to 44.7 g N kg −1 ), and urea (0 to 225 kg N ha −1 ), fall‐applied and incorporated, affected sugarbeet growth. The previous crop was wheat, and wheat straw was removed from the experimental sites subsequent to the grain harvest. Sugar yields were decreased 10% by application of 3.36 Mg ha −1 straw and 25% by 6.72 Mg ha −1 straw in 2000. The corresponding 2001 sugar decreases were 13 and 19%, respectively. Application of 45 kg ha −1 urea N largely overcame the detrimental effect from 3.36 Mg ha −1 straw but only partially overcame the detrimental effect from 6.72 Mg ha −1 straw in both experiments. Plant N, petiole NO 3 –N, and soil inorganic N (NH 4 –N + NO 3 –N) data all indicated that incorporation of low‐N mature wheat straw decreased availability of soil N, probably due to net N immobilization associated with straw decomposition. In contrast to mature wheat straw, application and incorporation of high‐N, preflowering wheat residues increased recoverable sugar yields in both years. Removal of straw after a wheat crop reduces the N fertilizer requirement for a subsequent sugarbeet crop.

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