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Voicu, A
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Authors
Cammarano, D
Drexler, D
Hinsinger, P
Martre, P
Draye, X
Sessitsch, A
Pecchioni, N
Cooper, J
Helga, W
Voicu, A
Topics
Big Data, Data Mining and Deep Learning
Type
Oral
Year
2018
Spatial and Temporal Factors Impacting Incremental Corn Nitrogen Fertilier Use Efficiency
1N. R. Kitchen, 2C. J. Ransom, 3J. S. Schepters, 4J. L. Hatfield, 5R. Massey
1. USDA-ARS
2. USDA ARS
3. Univ. of Nebraska
4. USDA ARS (retired)
5. Univ. of Missouri

Current tools for making crop N fertilizer recommendations are primarily based on plot and field studies that relate the recommendation to the economic optional N rate (EONR).  Some tools rely entirely on localized EONR (e.g., MRTN). In recent years, tools have been developed or adapted to  account for within-field variation in crop N need or variable within season factors. Separately, attention continues to elevate for how N fertilizer recommendations might account for environmental impacts. Efficiently using plant-available N from any source (fertilizer, manure, irrigation water, and mineralization) is a challenge because nitrate is soluble in water and thus is subject to losses via runoff from agricultural fields and leaching through porous soils. In addition, N can be lost from waterlogged soils via denitrification. One suggested way to consider the effect of N fertilizer on the environment is through crop N use efficiency (NUE) indices.  Studies indicate global NUE is only 30-40% for corn, which implies that fertilizer N application rate is 2-3 times more than the N contained in the grain. Using datasets of grain yield in response to N fertilizer we evaluated what NUE looks like incrementally (iNUE). For those last units of N fertilizer applied to reach economic optiomal N rate, iNUE as determined by the N removed with the grain is less than 10%. Our analysis also shows how temporatal and spatial soil and weather factors impact NUE. The objective of this paper will be to show how iNUE helps expose the problem of N fertilizer management yet also guide site-specific N management approaches.

Keyword: Nitrogen, NUE, Corn, environment