Journal article

Delaying nitrogen fertiliser application improves wheat 15N recovery from high rainfall cropping soils in south eastern Australia

RH Harris, RD Armstrong, AJ Wallace, ON Belyaeva

Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems | SPRINGER | Published : 2016

Abstract

Improving nitrogen (N) fertiliser uptake of crops growing in soils susceptible to waterlogging could potentially reduce fertiliser input costs and harmful losses of N to the surrounding environment. The fate of 15N labelled urea applied to wheat cv. Bolac was studied on brown chromosol soils at Hamilton and Tarrington, in the high rainfall zone of south western Victoria, in south eastern Australia. Wheat was fertilised with 15N-urea solution, either deep banded 0.1 m below the seed at sowing or top-dressed with or without the nitrification inhibitor DMPP (3,4-dimethylpyrazole phosphate or ENTEC®) later in the crops development. Daily temporal topsoil (0–0.1 m) water was monitored, throughout..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Australian Government


Funding Acknowledgements

We thank Brent Herrmann for allowing us to conduct the Tarrington experiment on his property, Debra Partington for biometric advice and Kirsten Fogarty, the late Michael Byron and Reto Zollinger for technical assistance. This research was funded through the federal Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Filling the Research Gap Program, the Grains Research and Development Corporation, More Profit from Crop Nutrition Program (DAV00125) and the Victorian State Government.