Most synthetic nitrogen (N) fertilizers used for corn (Zea mays L.) production supply ammonium (NH4+), but N availability can be reduced by volatilization or microbial immobilization. The former process is eliminated and the latter reduced by fertilizing with nitrate (NO3−), which is best done in-season to promote crop uptake while minimizing N loss by leaching or denitrification. To compare 15N uptake for in-season surface applications of labeled potassium nitrate (KNO3), urea-ammonium nitrate (UAN), and urea, field studies were conducted in two growing seasons on Mollisols and Alfisols located in production fields under second- or third-year corn or a corn–soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) rotation. In contrast to dry matter production and total N uptake, the three 15N sources often differed significantly in N derived from the labeled fertilizer (NDF15F) and fertilizer 15N uptake efficiency (F15NUE), both of which decreased in the order: KNO3 > UAN > urea. As evidenced by a laboratory incubation study using the same three 15N sources, this trend was attributed to differences in NH3 volatilization and microbial immobilization that was greater for ammoniacal than NO3− fertilizers. When surface applying a sidedressing to corn in the Midwestern United States, N uptake efficiency can be increased by the use of NO3− fertilizers.
CITATION STYLE
Griesheim, K. L., Mulvaney, R. L., Smith, T. J., Nunes, V. L. N., & Hertzberger, A. J. (2023). Isotopic comparison of ammonium and nitrate sources applied in-season to corn. Soil Science Society of America Journal, 87(3), 555–571. https://doi.org/10.1002/saj2.20531
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