Corn Yields Increase By Adding Nitrogen At Tasseling Time
COLUMBIA, MO.
“Potential corn-yield losses of 40 to 50
bushels per acre are showing up in
large areas with heavy rainfall,” said a
University of Missouri soil scientist.
“This week I saw lots of yellow corn on a trip
through northeast Missouri and neighboring
counties in Iowa and Illinois,” said Peter Scharf
on a weekly MU Extension agronomy teleconference.
“It is close to ‘last call’ for applying rescue nitrogen
to cornfields,” said Scharf, MU Extension
soil specialist. “But there is still time to add nitrogen
to increase yields.”
Nitrogen can be added until about July 15 in
northern Missouri, Scharf said. In his research
he saw yield increases with nitrogen fertilizer
added at tasseling time.
Many farm service companies are equipped to
apply nitrogen on tall corn. Nitrogen can be applied
from the air or with “high-boy” equipment
that rides over the top of the corn.
Extensive rains falling after nitrogen was applied
to cornfields has caused denitrification or
leaching from the soil.
Scharf maintains a “Nitrogen Watch” website
that shows most well-drained soils in eastern
Missouri as being in “danger.” More than 16
inches of rain has fallen across the area since
April 1. The earlier the nitrogen was put on, the
higher the risk of loss.
Some areas around Kahoka, Mo., and Keokuk,
Iowa, have recorded more than two feet of rainfall.
In northern Missouri, the heavy-rain area
extends from Bethany, Mo., to the Mississippi
River.
The greatest loss potential is in far northeast
Missouri, but close behind might be river-bottom
fields in St. Charles County, Scharf said.
Extensive areas of southeast Missouri have
had high rainfall. “Most producers there apply
nitrogen as a side dressing to the corn rows.
That is less vulnerable to loss as nitrogen is applied
after heaviest rains.”
Deep soil tests can determine the nitrogen in
the soil. But that takes time, trouble and expense.
If the corn appears yellow from nitrogen
stress, it can use some added nitrogen.
“If a field shows signs of significant yellowing,
it will pay to apply nitrogen, even this late,”
Scharf said. “If yields are cut by 40 bushels,
that makes a difference between profit and
loss.”
Well-drained soils, such creek and river bottoms,
are most vulnerable to nitrogen leaching,
Scharf said. “Even the poorly drained soils
across northeast Missouri are showing stress,”
he added.
Last year Scharf conducted six field trials, applying
nitrogen after stress symptoms were
seen. Yields increased by an average of 34
bushels per acre.
Nitrogen was applied to corn at tasseling,
when ears were pollinating. “I’d prefer to do it
sooner, but if corn needed it I’d keep applying
nitrogen until two weeks after tasseling,” he
said.
Producers should monitor cornfields for signs
of yellowing. Corn with potential for high yields
will be dark green.
In addition to the Missouri map, the “MU Nitrogen
Watch” website has a Midwest map
showing danger zones from eastern Nebraska
through Ohio.
Ten counties in the three-state region around
northeast Missouri are the worst in the nation,
Scharf said. Δ