Crop response to fertiliser nitrogen on a sodic soil in the Central Region

Abstract: The SIX EASY STEPS™ nutrient-management program encourages a process of ongoing refinement, and any change to a nutrient-management program should be based on evidence. This may include leaf testing, farm records, on-farm evaluation or a combination of these and other factors. Crop response to applied fertiliser should be one of the main factors assessed when refining a nutrient-management program. Crop response to applied nitrogen (N) may be reduced on sodic soils, associated with a reduced crop-N requirement where growth is constrained. However, the sodic conditions may also limit the crop’s ability to acquire N. A trial was established in the Central Region to investigate crop response to fertiliser N on sodic soil. N rate treatments (0, 50, 100, 150 and 200 kg N/ha as urea) were established in the first-ratoon crop and repeated for the remainder of the crop cycle. The trial contained two zones, one with low yield potential and high electrical conductivity (LYHEC) and a second zone with higher yield potential and low electrical conductivity (HYLEC). Both zones were highly sodic (ESP > 15%) at depth. An N deficiency developed over the crop cycle, with the 0N and 50N treatments showing lower leaf %N and reduced cane and sugar yield. OptimumN fertiliser rates increased from the first ratoon (18 kg N/ha) to the third ratoon (109 kg N/ha) but declined in the fourth ratoon (85 kg N/ha). Nitrogen-use efficiency declined with the N application rate, and the highest N uptake efficiency of fertiliser N was 27% at the 50N rate. Overall, the trial showed that a small reduction (~20 kg N/ha or 14%) from the recommended rate of 140 kg N/ha would have been appropriate at this site. The results support the recently developed SIX EASY STEPS Toolbox guidance for refining nutrient inputs for specific on-farm circumstances, including sodic soils. This guidance encourages amelioration of the sodic soil condition as the grower’s priority before the amendment of nutrient inputs is considered.


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Language: English

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