Premium
Double‐Crop Wheat and Soybean Yield Response to Poultry Litter Application
Author(s) -
Lin Yaru,
Watts Dexter B.,
Torbert H. Allen,
Howe Julie A.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
crop, forage and turfgrass management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.29
H-Index - 10
ISSN - 2374-3832
DOI - 10.2134/cftm2018.10.0082
Subject(s) - agronomy , poultry litter , loam , fertilizer , randomized block design , multiple cropping , tillage , crop , mathematics , cropping system , biology , nutrient , sowing , soil water , ecology
Core Ideas Integration of poultry litter with inorganic N may improve wheat–soybean productivity. Double cropping may increase soybean grain yield compared with mono‐cropping. Poultry litter alone was less effective on wheat production than inorganic N fertilizer.Poultry litter (PL) application and double cropping are management practices that could be used with conservation tillage to increase yields compared with conventional mono‐cropping systems. The objective of this study was to evaluate winter wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.) and soybean [ Glycine max (L.) Merr.] yield response to PL alone and combinations of PL and inorganic N versus inorganic N alone when applied to the winter wheat in a double‐cropping system. The study was conducted from 2014 to 2016 at two locations on a Marvyn loamy sand and a Lucedale fine sandy loam. Experimental design at each location was a randomized complete block design. Fertility treatments for winter wheat included an unfertilized control (PL 0 N 0 ), inorganic N fertilizer (120 lb acre –1 , PL 0 N 120 ), PL at the rate of 40 lb N acre –1 plus 80 lb acre –1 inorganic N (PL 40 N 80 ), PL at the rate of 80 lb N acre –1 plus 40 lb acre –1 inorganic N (PL 80 N 40 ), and PL at the rate of 120 lb N acre –1 (PL 120 N 0 ). An unfertilized winter fallow treatment was also included to enable a comparison of yield between the mono‐ and double‐cropped soybean. A combination of PL and inorganic N resulted in wheat yields comparable to those with inorganic N alone while PL alone yielded less. Double‐cropping soybeans with winter wheat tended to improve soybean yield when compared with mono‐cropped soybeans planted on the same date; however soybean yield was not consistently enhanced by the residual PL nutrients applied to wheat when compared with N fertilizer only treatment.