Not Too Late for Rescue Nitrogen
How late in the growing season can rescue nitrogen be applied to corn and still be profitable?
When nitrogen deficiency is seen, yields always improve when nitrogen is applied as late as tasseling, according to two decades of research by University of Missouri Extension agronomists. Limited research in other states suggests that applications as late as two weeks after tasseling could be effective in relieving deficiency.
The worse corn looks, the bigger the response to nitrogen fertilizer in boosting yields, says MU Extension nutrient management specialist Peter Scharf.
In 2015, there was plenty of nitrogen-deficient corn to study. Historic precipitation depleted applications of nitrogen made before planting. It was so wet that high-clearance fertilizer applicators had few days when they could run. Aerial applications of nitrogen were five times higher than in any previous year, but still many deficient fields were not treated.
Field-scale application equipment was in such high demand that Scharf had to use hand applications of rescue nitrogen to measure response.
Some growers and crop advisers felt cornfields were beyond hope, but research proved otherwise. “We failed to find corn that was so late and so pitiful that rescue N was unprofitable,” Scharf says.
MU research plots in grower fields found that yields increased an average of 45 bushels per acre in the four most-stressed fields when rescue nitrogen was applied in 2015. “These plants were 50 percent tasseled, not even shoulder-high, and yellow as could be,” says Scharf.
Missouri springs are becoming wetter, making the case for spring or split application of nitrogen, he says.
2015 boasted the second-wettest May-to-July period on record, falling just 0.1 inch short of a 121-year-old record.
Scharf’s rule of thumb: nitrogen loss occurs when 12 or more inches of rain fall on poorly drained soils in May and June.
There’s been no danger of that in 2016, with much of the state facing near-drought conditions through the end of June. Only small pockets of the state reached the 16-inch mark, mainly in the eastern Ozarks. Recent rains have not resulted in nitrogen loss.
Source: Peter C. Scharf, University of Missouri