Title: Uptake and agronomic efficiency of nitrogen in winter barley and winter wheat
Abstract: Nitrogen (N) uptake and utilization efficiency (NUtE) of the high-yielding cultivars `Gemini' of wheat and `Jaidor' of barley were tested with N rates of 0, 140 and 210 kg ha−1 and 0, 80 and 140 kg ha−1, respectively. The different grain yield response was linked to their difference in nitrogen uptake and utilization efficiency. The highest yield in barley was recorded with 80 kg N ha−1 and in wheat with 210 kg N ha−1. Nitrogen application affected the accumulation of biomass up to heading in wheat and barley. While N uptake during grain filling did not show any correlation to N applied in barley, it was markedly correlated in wheat. At N0 and N140 N applied, barley exhibited a 32 and 8% higher NUtE than wheat. N agronomic efficiency, a parameter representing the ability of the plant to increase yield in response to N applied, was similar in barley and wheat (8.7 and 9.2 kg kg−1 of N applied, respectively), suggesting that both species respond equally to nitrogen fertilization. Nevertheless, due to its lower NUtE, wheat requires high N fertilization to optimize yields; by contrast, in barley the lower N rate needed to achieve highest yields enables this crop to perform better in low-input conditions. As a results, the reduced N requirements for barley highest yield associated with a better RF value (apparent N fertilizer recovery of 63% in barley and 49% in wheat at N140) makes barley crop a better choice to reduce ground-water pollution due to nitrate leaching in winter and early spring.
Publication Year: 1998
Publication Date: 1998-06-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 300
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