Winter wheat reaction to soil fertilization and foliar nitrogen application

2008 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Buczek ◽  
Barbara Kryńska ◽  
Renata Tobiasz-Salach
Author(s):  
Fellipe Lemes da Rosa ◽  
Oscar Mitsuo Yamashita ◽  
Marco Camillo de Carvalho ◽  
Rivanildo Dallacort ◽  
Adriano Maltezo da Rocha ◽  
...  

The objective was to evaluate the application of foliar nitrogen in different doses and times, as a complement to soil fertilization. The work was conducted in a rural area of the municipality of Terra Nova do Norte – MT, located in the southern of brazilian Amazon. The treatments were a combination of foliar applications of nitrogen at doses of 0, 250, 500 and 750 mL.ha-1, and two application times with different intervals: 15 and 40 days after emergence; and 25 and 40 days after the emergency. The experimental design was a randomized block with four replications, in a factorial 4 x 2, totaling eight treatments. It was found that the variables green mass productivity and dried plant and ear and ear length responded positively as the N rates and application times. It was also observed that the foliar application of nitrogen increased the productivity of corn for silage, and better results are obtained from 750 mL.ha-1 of the studied leaf fertilizer. There was no increase in production factors when the foliar application of nitrogen was split.


2002 ◽  
Vol 94 (3) ◽  
pp. 429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Curt W. Woolfolk ◽  
William R. Raun ◽  
Gordon V. Johnson ◽  
Wade E. Thomason ◽  
Robert W. Mullen ◽  
...  

1955 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 449-456 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gillian N. Thorne ◽  
D. J. Watson

Nitrogen, at the rate of 0.5 cwt./acre, was applied to winter wheat as an April dressing of nitrochalk, or as eight sprayings of 2% NH4NO3 solution applied either to the soil or to the leaves at about the period of maximum leaf area, before and during ear emergence. All three methods of nitrogen application caused similar increases in yield and nitrogen content of grain. April nitrogen gave a greater yield of straw than the later dressings.Late nitrogen application caused a small increase in leaf area index, first noticeable one week after ear emergence and persisting for another four weeks. L.A.I. of plots that received nitrogen in April was much larger than that of the other plots at the period of maximum leaf area, but by four weeks after ear emergence it was less than that of plots receiving the late nitrogen. Shoot number per metre and leaf area per shoot were increased by early nitrogen, but only the latter was increased by nitrogen applied at ear emergence.Leaf area duration after ear emergence was the same on all nitrogen-treated plots and the yield of grain divided by L.A.D. was nearly constant for all plots.Applying nitrogen late, after an April dressing, did not prevent the rapid fall in L.A.I. from the high value reached at the period of maximum leaf area and caused no greater increase in yield than when applied in the absence of an April top-dressing. A single urea spray applied in early June increased yield to the same extent as the ammonium nitrate sprays.


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