166-3 Uptake Efficiency and Partitioning of Soil and Fertilizer N Sources By Canola, Wheat, and Pea.

Poster Number 1218

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Fertility & Plant Nutrition
See more from this Session: Ph.D. Graduate Student Poster Competition
Monday, November 3, 2014
Long Beach Convention Center, Exhibit Hall ABC
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Tai McClellan Maaz1, Taylor Lynn-Marie Beard1 and William L Pan2, (1)Crop and Soil Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA
(2)PO Box 646420, Washington State University, Pullman, WA
The indigenous soil N supply is often not factored into many N use efficiency equations. In order to determine the relative contribution of residual soil N, a greenhouse study was conducted in which wheat, inoculated field pea, and canola plant received labeled (15NH4)2SO4 fertilizer at rates of 6, 60, 180 or 420 mg N kg soil-1. The proportion of plant N derived from fertilizer (%Ndff), soil (%Ndfs), and atmosphere (%Ndfa) was measured using the isotope dilution technique. Multiple nitrogen recovery indices were calculated, including the recovery of 15N fertilizer by crops, N uptake efficiency (plant N/N supply), available N use efficiency (plant N/[plant N +residual N]), and the apparent fertilizer N recovery ([fertilized plant N- control plant N]/fertilizer rate).  Canola and wheat derived similar proportions of plant N from fertilizer, ranging from 4 to 65%. N fertilization had a significantly negative impact on %Ndfa by field pea, which declined from 53-3%. Nevertheless, a majority of plant N was derived from fertilizer only when fertilizer N contributed to more than 62% of the N supply. For all crops, uptake efficiency, apparent fertilizer N recovery, and available N use efficiency exceeded 15N crop recovery. Furthermore, less than 2% of the N supplied remained after the harvest of all crops, with the exception of pea fertilized at the highest rate. Our results highlight the importance of indigenous soil N in supplying N under limiting conditions or high losses, and supports the inclusion of indigenous N supply in N use indices.
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Fertility & Plant Nutrition
See more from this Session: Ph.D. Graduate Student Poster Competition