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Irrigated Grain Sorghum Response to Long-Term Nitrogen and Phosphorus Fertilization

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  • Irrigated Grain Sorghum Response to Long-Term Nitrogen and Phosphorus Fertilization

    soil_fertility

    Irrigated Grain Sorghum Response to Long-Term Nitrogen and Phosphorus Fertilization

    Authors

Abstract

Long-term research shows that phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) fertilizer must be applied to optimize production of irrigated grain sorghum in western Kansas. In 2016, N applied alone increased yields 71 bu/a, whereas N and P applied together increased yields up to 93 bu/a. Averaged across the past 10 years, N and P fertilization increased sorghum yields up to 77 bu/a. Application of 80 lb/a N (with P) was sufficient to produce 89% of maximum yield in 2016, which is slightly less than the 10-yr average. Application of potassium (K) has had no effect on sorghum yield throughout the study period. Average grain N content reached a maximum of ~0.7 lb/bu while grain P content reached a maximum of 0.15 lb/bu (0.34 lb P2O5/bu) and grain K content reached a maximum of 0.19 lb/bu (0.23 lb K2O/bu). At the highest N, P, and K rate, apparent fertilizer recovery in the grain was 33% for N, 69% for P, and 40% for K.

Keywords: nitrogen fertilization, phosphorus fertilization, irrigated grain sorghum, long term fertility, nutrient removal

How to Cite:

Schlegel, A. & Bond, H. D., (2017) “Irrigated Grain Sorghum Response to Long-Term Nitrogen and Phosphorus Fertilization”, Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Reports 3(5). doi: https://doi.org/10.4148/2378-5977.7402

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Published on
2017-01-01