Revista Brasileira de Ciência do Solo (Dec 2013)

Efficiency of nitrogen fertilizer applied at corn sowing in contrasting growing seasons in Paraguay

  • Telmo Jorge Carneiro Amado,
  • Enrique Oswin Hahn Villalba,
  • Rafael Pivotto Bortolotto,
  • Antônio Luis Santi,
  • Enrique Asterio Benítez León,
  • Dorothy Menefee,
  • Junior Kunz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-06832013000600020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 6
pp. 1641 – 1650

Abstract

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In order to select soil management practices that increase the nitrogen-use efficiency (NUE) in agro-ecosystems, the different indices of agronomic fertilizer efficiency must be evaluated under varied weather conditions. This study assessed the NUE indices in no-till corn in southern Paraguay. Nitrogen fertilizer rates from 0 to 180 kg ha-1 were applied in a single application at corn sowing and the crop response investigated in two growing seasons (2010 and 2011). The experimental design was a randomized block with three replications. Based on the data of grain yield, dry matter, and N uptake, the following fertilizer indices were assessed: agronomic N-use efficiency (ANE), apparent N recovery efficiency (NRE), N physiological efficiency (NPE), partial factor productivity (PFP), and partial nutrient balance (PNB). The weather conditions varied largely during the experimental period; the rainfall distribution was favorable for crop growth in the first season and unfavorable in the second. The PFP and ANE indices, as expected, decreased with increasing N fertilizer rates. A general analysis of the N fertilizer indices in the first season showed that the maximum rate (180 kg ha-1) obtained the highest corn yield and also optimized the efficiency of NPE, NRE and ANE. In the second season, under water stress, the most efficient N fertilizer rate (60 kg ha-1) was three times lower than in the first season, indicating a strong influence of weather conditions on NUE. Considering that weather instability is typical for southern Paraguay, anticipated full N fertilization at corn sowing is not recommended due the temporal variability of the optimum N fertilizer rate needed to achieve high ANE.

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