2008 Joint Annual Meeting (5-9 Oct. 2008): Using a Chlorophyll Meter to Predict Mid-season Nitrogen Fertilizer Rate for Cotton.

771-5 Using a Chlorophyll Meter to Predict Mid-season Nitrogen Fertilizer Rate for Cotton.



Wednesday, 8 October 2008
George R. Brown Convention Center, Exhibit Hall E
David Dunn, PO Box 160, University of Missouri, University of Missouri, Delta Center, Portageville, MO 63873, Gene Stevens, University of Missouri, PO Box 160, Portageville, MO 63873, Peter Scharf, 214 Waters, University of Missouri, University of Missouri, Department of Agronomy, Columbia, MO 65211, J. Glenn Davis, Nutrient Mgmt. & Precision Farming, NRCS, 601 Business Loop 70 West, Suite 250, Columbia, MO 65211 and Luciane Oliveira, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211
Applying too little or too much nitrogen (N) fertilizer to cotton lowers profit. The amount of N supplied by the soil is difficult to predict, making it hard to choose the best N rate to apply. Low pre-plant N, followed by a mid-season N application (early square to first flower) offers an opportunity to diagnose N status and adjust N fertilization to the optimal level. Our objective was to develop interpretations for a hand-held Minolta chlorophyll meter to diagnose N status mid-season in support of profitable N rate decisions. Field-length (1100 ft) strips of N fertilizer rates from 0 to 150 lb N/ac were applied and replicated four times. Chlorophyll meter measurements were taken every two weeks from all N rate strips. Before harvest, alleys were cut every 50 feet across the strips, and a plot picker was used to measure yield in every 50 foot area. The experiment was divided into two zones using an NRCS soils map and a soil electrical conductivity map. Zone 1 was sandy and made up 28% of the field, while zone 2 was loamy. All yield data from zone 1 were used to construct a curve showing yield response to N in that zone, and the same was done for zone 2. From these curves, it was possible to calculate the most profitable rate of N in each zone. The experiment was conducted for three years, giving a total of six measurements of the most profitable N rate (3 years x 2 zones/year). We found that chlorophyll meter measurements in the 0 N strips, divided by measurements from the 150 lb N/ac strips, was strongly related to the most profitable N rate. We propose that chlorophyll meter measurements can be used to predict the most profitable N rate for a mid-season N application.