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Soil Fertility 101 With a focus on wheat producing areas

Soil Fertility 101 With a focus on wheat producing areas. by Clain Jones, Extension Soil Fertility Specialist clainj@montana.edu ; 406 994-6076. Questions. How many of you use a crop adviser for making fertilizer decisions?. How many do your own soil sampling?. Goals Today.

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Soil Fertility 101 With a focus on wheat producing areas

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  1. Soil Fertility 101 With a focus on wheat producing areas by Clain Jones, Extension Soil Fertility Specialistclainj@montana.edu; 406 994-6076

  2. Questions • How many of you use a crop adviser for making fertilizer decisions? • How many do your own soil sampling?

  3. Goals Today • Introduce basics of soil fertility • Focus on nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, and sulfur cycling and differences in their plant-availability • Show nutrient deficiency symptoms and ‘test’ you • Introduce soil sampling and explain yield response curves • Show how to use Fertilizer Guidelines and soil lab results to estimate fertilizer needs • Have you determine fertilizer rates given a soil test report • Identify some differences between conventional and air drills • HELP your bottom line!

  4. There are 14 mineral nutrients that have been found to be essential for growth of most plants: The macronutrients are simply needed in larger amounts by the plant than the micronutrients. Nutrient deficiencies of the bolded nutrients have been observed in Montana

  5. Mobility in soil of selected nutrients Why important? Can affect optimum fertilizer placement

  6. Effect of subsurface banding urea compared to broadcast urea in Golden Triangle on small grain yield Kushnak et al., 1992

  7. Banding Phosphorus Banding P is much more effective than banding N, because P is much more immobile in the soil.

  8. For more information on soil fertility and plant nutrition, refer to Nutrient Management Module 2, and for more information on Fertilizer Placement, look at Module 11: http://www.montana.edu/wwwpb/pubs/mt4449.html

  9. Nutrient Reactions and Cyling • Will focus on N, P, K, and S because these have best chance of limiting yield and protein.

  10. The N Cycle

  11. ‘Mineralization’ Release of minerals as organic matter (O.M.) is oxidized, releasing available N Organic-N  Plant-Available N If have higher than normal O.M. (>3%), can back off on N fertilizer by 20 lb/ac. ‘Immobilization’ Incorporation of available N into microbial cells or plant tissue Plant-Available N  Organic-N If leave more than ½ ton stubble, increase N fertilizer by 10 lb/ac.

  12. If you want more information on N cycling, go to MSU Extension’s publication on the topic at: http://www.montana.edu/wwwpb/pubs/mt44493.pdf

  13. Movement of P is largely through erosion/runoff, NOT leaching. Why? P Cycle P binds strongly to soil Why simpler than N cycle? No gas phase

  14. Soluble P concentrations in soil are generally very low (0.01 – 1 mg/L) due to: • Precipitation and low solubility of calcium phosphate minerals. This is very relevant in this region. • 2. Strong sorption to manganese, aluminum, and iron oxides and hydroxides (example: rust). This process increases at low pH and is more of an issue in the Southeast U.S. At what pH levels would you likely need to fertilize with more P?

  15. The effect of soil pH on P retention and availability. From Havlin et al. (1999). pH

  16. If you want more information on P cycling, go to MSU Extension’s publication at: http://www.montana.edu/wwwpb/pubs/mt44494.pdf

  17. Questions so far?

  18. Potassium (K) Needed in Montana?

  19. Which crops have largest K needs?

  20. How might K, or lack of K, affect an alfalfa-hay field?

  21. Potassium Forms

  22. Potassium Cycling

  23. Alfalfa-grass +S +S -S +S -S Protein content (%) -S Moore Moccasin Geyser Sulfur (S) Responses seen in Montana? Note: Yield increased 30% at Moccasin (Wichman, 2001)

  24. Effect of S on Protein in Wheat % of Total N

  25. Effect of S on Canola Seed Yield 20 lb S/ac S 40 lb S/ac Insert Figure 3 0 lb S/ac Seed yield (lb/ac) Available N (lb/ac)

  26. Sulfur cycling

  27. Questions so far?

  28. Nutrient Deficiency Symptoms

  29. Nutrients that are mobile in plant will affect lower leaves first Mobile nutrients (in plant) Nitrogen Phosphorus Potassium Chloride For nutrients that are sometimes deficient in Montana crops

  30. Pseudo-deficiencies What else can cause symptoms that look like nutrient deficiency symptoms? • Herbicides • Disease • Insects • Moisture stress • Salinity

  31. How verify nutrient deficiency? 1. Soil Testing 2. Tissue Testing 3. Apply fertilizer test strip

  32. What else would you look at other than shoot tissue? • Roots – healthy (white), distribution? • Soil – compacted, texture, moisture? • Distribution on field – near edges, patchy, in strips…? • ?

  33. Factors decreasing N availability • Low organic matter • Poor nodulation of legumes (ex: alfalfa) • Excessive leaching • Cool temperatures, dry In general, N, especially nitrate, is very mobile in soil.

  34. N Deficiency Symptoms Alfalfa • Pale green to yellow lower (older) leaves Why lower leaves? • Stunted, slow growth • Yellow edges on alfalfa N is MOBILE in plant Corn Spring Wheat

  35. Phosphorus (P) Why often deficient in Montana soils? Binds with calcium to form poorly soluble calcium phosphate minerals

  36. Factors decreasing P availability • Soil pH below 6.0 or above 7.5 • Cold, wet weather • Calcareous soils • Leveled soils • Highly weathered, sandy soils

  37. P Deficiency Symptoms Adequate P • Dark green, often purple • Lower leaves sometimes yellow • Upward tilting of leaves may occur in alfalfa • Often seen on ridges of fields Low P Alfalfa Wheat Lettuce

  38. Factors decreasing K availability • Cold, dry soils • Poorly aerated soils • High calcium and magnesium levels • Sandy, low clay soils • Low soil organic matter, or high amounts of available N

  39. K deficiency symptoms • Alfalfa – white spots on leaf edges • Corn and grasses – chlorosis and necrosis on lower leaves first. WHY? • Weakening of straw-lodging in small grains, breakage in corn. K is mobile in plant 4. Wilting, stunted, shortened internodes.

  40. Factors decreasing S availability • Irrigated with low S in irrigation water • Sandy, acidic, or low organic matter soils • Cold soils • Soils formed from minerals low in S or far from industrial sources

  41. S deficiency symptoms • Upper leaves light green to yellow. WHY? • Small, thin stems • Low protein • Delayed maturity • No characteristic spots or stripes S is immobile in plant

  42. Questions so far?

  43. What nutrient is deficient? SULFUR Options: Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Sulfur

  44. What nutrient is deficient? NITROGEN Options: Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Sulfur

  45. What nutrient is deficient? PHOSPHORUS Options: Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Sulfur

  46. What nutrient is deficient? POTASSIUM Options: Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Sulfur

  47. See Nutrient Management Module 11 for more info on Nutrient Deficiency Symptoms

  48. Let’s take a 5 minute break

  49. Soil Testing

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