Abstract
An area of plant science that is still uncertain is
precisely what determines plants' demand for nitrogen
(N), that is the amount of N they need to take up from
the soil to meet their requirements for potential
growth and synthesis of new tissue. A robust and
unequivocal physiological basis from which to determine N demand is
lacking. Yet N dominates plant
nutrition. No nutrient is needed in larger quantities
and, in most environments, no nutrient is in such
limiting supply. Knowledge of the factors governing
N demand is essential to predict the needs of crops
under a wide range of field situations, so that growers
can be given more reliable fertilizer recommendations
(Greenwood 1982; van Keulen et al. 1989). This is
important, not just for economic reasons, but because
of the risks to the environment that can arise from the
over-application of N fertilizers, in particular the
problem of nitrate leaching (Addiscott et al. 1991).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology