Ames, Iowa
June 13, 2003
Iowa corn fields need spring
rains to produce high yields. But a recent study shows those
spring rains also wash away some of the nutrients needed to
attain high yields. The study conducted by
Iowa State University (ISU)
researchers is published in the May-June issue of the
Journal of Environmental
Quality.
The study included a 10-year survey of nitrate concentrations in
cornfields managed by farmers. Nitrate is the form of nitrogen
that corn plants need from the soil.
More than 3,200 soil and cornstalk samples were collected by
researchers from fields planted to corn
and already fertilized by farmers using their normal practices.
The sampling was done in the Des Moines River and the Iowa River
watersheds.
The participating farmers provided information on how much
nitrogen they applied in fields where samples were taken, and
whether it was in the form of commercial fertilizer or manure.
Researchers studied monthly precipitation totals and data on
nitrate levels in rivers during the same time period.
Nitrate concentrations in fields were measured in early June.
Soil samples were collected when corn
plants were six to 12 inches tall. Researchers concluded that
more spring rainfall resulted in less nitrate for plant growth.
And nitrate levels found in the fields were inversely related to
nitrate levels in rivers.
"These findings provide evidence that spring rainfall moves
nitrate from cornfields to rivers before crops
grow," said Alfred Blackmer, Iowa State University agronomist
and leader of the research team. "This movement of nitrate hurts
farmers economically, because they pay for the fertilizer even
when it does not remain in fields long enough to feed the crop."
Blackmer said the problem can be reduced by delaying
fertilization until late May or early June which is when the
plants need nitrogen, and is after most spring rainfall has
occurred. "Such delays would enable most farmers to reduce
average rates of fertilization while increasing average yields
and profits," he said.
The effects of rainfall were confirmed in a second part of the
research that involved taking cornstalk
samples one to three weeks after corn plants matured, generally
in mid-September through mid-October. "Because this test is
taken at the end of the growing season, it evaluates
fertilization practices for their ability to supply optimal
amounts of nitrogen for plant growth late in the season,"
Blackmer said.
Blackmer said the late-spring test for soil nitrate and the
end-of-season test for cornstalk nitrate offer
novel ways to help crop producers join in efforts to reduce
nitrate losses from fields.
Antonio Mallarino, another ISU agronomist, also was involved in
the research project. The work was
funded in part by grants from the Leopold Center for Sustainable
Agriculture, USDA Sustainable
Agriculture Research and Education Program, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, the Northwest
Area Foundation and the Iowa Corn Promotion Board.
The Journal of Environmental Quality is published by the
American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America
and Soil Science Society of America.
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