Abstract
Use of urea fertiliser for cereal cropping in south eastern Australia has
increased rapidly in recent years to arrest a general decline in grain protein
and to increase yields. In conservation cropping systems, crop stubbles
provide a source of carbon, which has the potential to retain a portion of the
fertiliser nitrogen in the soil. The impact of fertiliser nitrogen was
compared under 4 stubble management regimes for efficiency of nitrogen uptake
by a wheat crop in a long-term cereal–grain legume rotation. The
experiment was established on a duplex red-brown earth in 1985 to compare
stubble retention (standing, shredded, incorporated) with stubble burning. In
1995, wheat following a failed lupin crop was topdressed with urea fertiliser
at 50 kg nitrogen per hectare to split plots of each stubble treatment at the
third-leaf stage of growth. The urea significantly increased nitrogen uptake
by wheat grown on burnt stubbles and increased grain yield by 1 t/ha.
Nitrogen applied to wheat grown on stubbles retained above-ground increased
yield by 0.5 t/ha, whereas there was no significant yield increase from
nitrogen when stubble was incorporated due to less transfer of dry matter to
grain. Efficiency of urea-nitrogen uptake in grain was reduced under stubble
retention. The total grain nitrogen uptake in response to stubble burning
increased by 17.6 kg/ha, which was equivalent to a conversion efficiency
of 35%, compared with only 26, 24 and 16% of the applied 50 kg
nitrogen per hectare for stubble standing, shredding and incorporation
treatments, respectively. Soil organic carbon and total nitrogen levels were 1
and 0.1%, respectively, irrespective of stubble treatment. Added urea
increased microbial decomposition of cellulose in calico cloth buried beneath
stubbles retained above-ground by 30%, compared with stubble
incorporated or burnt treatments. These results suggest that where low levels
of available nitrogen exist in cropping systems that use stubble retention,
higher nitrogen inputs may be needed, due to less efficient uptake of nitrogen
from urea fertiliser.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
9 articles.
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