Author:
Birch C. J.,Fukai S.,Broad I. J.
Abstract
The effect of nitrogen application on the grain yield and grain protein
concentration of barley was studied in 13 field trials covering a wide range
of soil N conditions over 4 years at locations in south-eastern Queensland.
The main objectives of the study were to quantify the response of barley to N
application rate over a range of environmental conditions, and to explain the
response in terms of soil mineral N, total N uptake, and N distribution in the
plants.
Barley made efficient use of N (60 kg grain/kg N) until grain yield
reached 90% of maximum yield. Grain protein concentration did not
increase to levels unacceptable for malting purposes until grain yield
exceeded 85–90% of maximum yield. Nitrogen harvest index was
generally high (above 0·75), and did not decrease until the total N
supply exceeded that necessary for maximum grain yield. Rates of application
of N for malting barley should be determined on the basis of soil analysis
(nitrate-N) to 1 m depth and 90% of expected maximum grain yield,
assuming that 17 kg N is taken up per tonne of grain produced. It can further
be assumed that the crop makes full use of the nitrate N to 1 m present at
planting, provided the soil is moist to 1 m.
A framework relating grain yield to total N uptake, N harvest index, and grain
N concentration is presented. Further, total N uptake of fertilised barley is
related to N uptake without fertiliser, fertiliser application rate, and
apparent N recovery. The findings reported here will be useful in the
development of barley simulation models and decision support packages that can
be used to aid N management.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
19 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献