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Published online 7 July 2009
Published in Agron J 101:958-970 (2009)
DOI: 10.2134/agronj2008.0173x
© 2009 American Society of Agronomy
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SOYBEAN

Growth and Nitrogen Fixation in High-Yielding Soybean: Impact of Nitrogen Fertilization

Fernando Salvagiottia, James E. Spechtb,*, Kenneth G. Cassmanb, Daniel T. Waltersb, Albert Weissc and Achim Dobermannd

a National Institute of Agricultural Research (INTA), EEA Oliveros, Ruta 11 km 353, 2206, Oliveros, Argentina
b Dep. of Agronomy and Horticulture, Univ. of Nebraska, P.O. Box 839015, Lincoln, NE 68583-0915
c School of Natural Resources, Univ. of Nebraska, P.O. Box 830728, Lincoln, NE 68583-0728
d International Rice Research Institute, DAPO Box 7777, Metro Manila, the Philippines

* Corresponding author (jspecht1{at}unl.edu).

In high-yielding soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] environments, N uptake during seed-filling may be constrained when the late-season decline in biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) is coupled with insufficient soil N. Three N-fertilization strategies were compared with a control (N0) on soybeans in 2006 and 2007 in a high-yield soybean-maize (Zea mays L.) rotation experiment established in 1999. Our objective was to identify strategies for overcoming a late-season N-supply limitation to maximal seed yield coupled with N fertilizer-induced reduction in BNF. In the N0 treatment, no N was applied, but in each N fertilization strategy, 180 kg N ha–1 were applied as (i) polymer-coated controlled-release urea placed 20 cm below the soil surface before planting (NLu); (ii) ammonium nitrate split-applied to the surface before planting and at V6 (early application, NEa), or (iii) ammonium nitrate applied to the surface at R5 (NLa). The ureide method was used to estimate BNF. The N0 yield was 4850 kg ha–1, but the mean of the three N-applied treatments had 228 kg ha–1 (5%) higher yields. The N0 N uptake was 411 kg ha–1, but it was 36 kg ha–1 (9%) greater in the mean of the three N treatments. Nitrogen uptake attributable to BNF in the N0, NLu, NEa, and NLa treatments was 50, 46, 32, and 38% of total N accumulation, respectively. Yield maximization and mitigation of N fertilizer-induced reduction of BNF were both achievable when soybean plants acquired N from a slow-release urea applied before planting in a deep band located below the root nodulation zone.

Abbreviations: BNF, biological nitrogen (N2) fixation • EI, ecological intensification • M1 or M2, N fertilization management histories • N0, no N fertilization (control) • NLu, fertilization with late-release urea • NEa, fertilization with early applied ammonium nitrate • NHI, nitrogen harvest index • NLa, fertilization with late-applied ammonium nitrate • CGR, crop growth rate • HI, harvest index • NUR, nitrogen uptake rate

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Received for publication November 7, 2008.





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