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Cumulative and Residual Effects of Swine Slurry and Mineral Nitrogen in Irrigated Maize
Author(s) -
Yagüe María R.,
Quílez D.
Publication year - 2010
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/agronj2010.0282
Subject(s) - sowing , human fertilization , agronomy , monoculture , zoology , nitrogen , slurry , zea mays , chemistry , biology , environmental science , environmental engineering , organic chemistry
Swine ( Sus scrofa domesticus ) slurry (SS) combined with mineral N fertilizers is a common fertilization practice in irrigated monoculture maize ( Zea mays L.) in northeastern Spain. This study was designed to analyze the cumulative and residual response of sprinkler‐irrigated maize to SS application. A 4‐yr field experiment was setup with 16 treatments combining four SS rates between 30 and 120 Mg ha −1 and eight mineral N rates between 0 and 350 kg N ha −1 Maximum yields (10.2–11.7 Mg ha −1 ) and also critical rate of N fertilization (0 −179 kg N ha −1 ) varied between years. Application of 30 Mg SS ha −1 at presowing complemented with 175 kg mineral N ha −1 at side‐dressing was the sole SS treatment reaching maximum yield for all years. Significant precipitation in spring 2003 (119 mm) leached the applied N at sowing and maize responded only to the N applied at side‐dressing. The 4‐yr average maximum N fertilization rate that does not promote soil nitrate accumulation was established at 134 kg N ha −1 yr −1 Two years after the last SS application maize yield (average 5.7 Mg ha −1 ) did not differ from the control treatment (6.3 Mg ha −1 ); that is, no residual effects were detected 2 yr after SS application. The best maize N fertilization strategy was the application before sowing of a low SS rate that would cover the whole maize PK needs and initial N needs (30 Mg ha −1 of fattening farm SS), complemented with the required amounts of mineral N at side‐dressing.