Cow manure application cuts chemical phosphorus fertilizer need in silage rice in Japan

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Abstract

Cow manure is a good source of phosphorus (P). Here, we investigated whether the amount of P fertilizer can be reduced when cow manure is applied to paddy soil based on growth, P uptake, yield, and soil P status evaluation. Treatments included unfertilized control (CK); manure plus chemical nitrogen (N), potassium (K), and P fertilizer (MNK P); MNK and 75% P (MNK3⁄4 P); MNK and 50% P (MNK1⁄2 P); MNK and 25% P (MNK1⁄4 P); and MNK. Manure was applied at the rate of 10 t ha−1 in fresh weight base. The P fertilizer was applied at 34.9 kg P ha−1 as full dose. Treatment with MNK resulted in the same growth, P uptake, and yield as that with the P fertilizer. P uptake and yield did not respond to P input from chemical fertilizer owing to high soil Olsen P levels. Moreover, MNK could maintain soil Olsen P and total P. Manure application resulted in a positive partial P balance. These results suggest that manure application can cut P fertilizer requirements in P-rich soils, while maintaining soil P for optimal rice growth and yield. By using cow manure in rice production, farmers can conserve finite P resources.

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APA

Nguyen, T. T., Sasaki, Y., Katahira, M., & Singh, D. (2021). Cow manure application cuts chemical phosphorus fertilizer need in silage rice in Japan. Agronomy, 11(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11081483

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