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Using In‐Season Nitrogen Management and Wheat Cultivars to Improve Nitrogen Use Efficiency
Author(s) -
Cui Zhenling,
Zhang Fusuo,
Chen Xinping,
Li Fei,
Tong Yiping
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
soil science society of america journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.836
H-Index - 168
eISSN - 1435-0661
pISSN - 0361-5995
DOI - 10.2136/sssaj2010.0117
Subject(s) - cultivar , agronomy , fertilizer , yield (engineering) , mathematics , nitrogen , growing season , grain yield , productivity , biology , chemistry , materials science , macroeconomics , economics , metallurgy , organic chemistry
The development of more efficient N management strategies and more N‐efficient plants is crucial to achieving maximum grain yield with minimum N fertilizer inputs. An on‐farm study was conducted during 3 yr (one site per year) with six N levels and two soft wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars: an N‐efficient cultivar (KN) and a major commercial cultivar (LM). The goal was to evaluate the potential to improve grain yield and N use efficiency (NUE) and to determine the optimal N management strategy for the two cultivars in the North China Plain. Optimal N fertilizer rates (ONR) were determined for an in‐season N management strategy by estimating soil NO 3 –N content in the root zone from a target N value at two wheat growth periods. Compared with farmers' practices, the ONR reduced N fertilizer by 68%, from 369 to 117 kg N ha −1 , without any yield losses while decreasing N losses from 123 to 30 kg N ha −1 across all wheat cultivars and years. Grain yield with ONR treatment increased from 5.5 to 6.4 Mg ha −1 and improved agronomic N efficiency from 12 to 16 kg kg −1 , N partial factor productivity from 50 to 61 kg kg −1 , and physiological N efficiency from 21 to 37 kg kg −1 for KN compared with LM. More efficient N use, low N demand, and high growth and N uptake postanthesis contributed to high grain yields and high NUE for KN. Changes in N management may not be necessary during early growth for all wheat cultivars, but more N must be available at later growth stages to achieve maximum grain yield for KN, given its high growth and N uptake postanthesis.

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