Nitrogen Watch 2013 Launches
COLUMBIA, MO.
On New Year’s Day we
likely had a lot of N left
by last year’s droughted
corn still in our fields in Missouri.
Most or all of that N is
gone now – a few deep soil
samples taken in early April
did not show as much N as
expected. Things have only
gotten worse since then, with an additional 6
inches of rain over eastern and southwestern
Missouri flushing out even more N.
Nitrogen fertilizer that has been applied may
be soon to follow. How much fertilizer is lost depends
on the weather, the soil, and the source
and date of the N application.
Nitrate is the main form of N that is vulnerable
to loss, but all fertilizer eventually will convert
to nitrate in the soil. Urea, ammonium
nitrate, and urea-ammonium nitrate solution
are all probably more than half nitrate within
two weeks of application, while anhydrous ammonia
probably takes six weeks or even longer
when soil temperatures are cool. This is why anhydrous
ammonia is sometimes applied much
earlier than other forms of N.
Between fertilizer application and crop N uptake,
which for corn is mainly in June and July,
more time and more rain increase the risk that
the N won’t be there when the crop needs it.
Earlier applications are more vulnerable to loss.
Nitrogen Watch is a web-based tool to help
you track rainfall and risk of N loss during
spring for areas where you farm or do business.
It is based on cumulative precipitation maps
(Missouri and Midwest) and is updated weekly.
On those maps we identify ‘danger areas’ that
are on track to have widespread problems with
N loss and deficiency in corn. ‘Danger areas’
have not necessarily lost enough N to cause serious
N deficiency at this point, but if rains keep
coming at the same rate in these areas then I
expect lots of fields to have N deficiency and
yield limitation. This is a serious production
and environmental problem that I estimate cost
Midwestern corn producers 2 billion bushels
total from 2008 to 2011.
Producers and ag service providers in the
‘danger areas’ should prepare for rescue nitrogen
fertilizer applications in the case that nitrogen
deficiencies develop.
There are separate maps of ‘danger areas’ for
well-drained and for poorly-drained soils. In
well-drained soils, nitrate leaching is the main
mechanism of loss. This can start whenever the
N fertilizer has converted to the nitrate form. I
use April 1 as a typical date to have N applied
and some converted to nitrate. The eastern half
of Missouri is, along with some of southwest
Missouri, currently in the ‘danger zone’ for welldrained
soils that had N applied by April 1.
In poorly-drained soils, denitrification is the
main mechanism of loss. This process is fastest
when soils are warm and near or at saturation.
I use May 1 as a day representing when soils
have warmed enough for this process to be significant,
although soils were cooler on that date
this year than they normally would be. Only a
smattering of areas along the eastern side of the
state are currently on track to have major N
problems on poorly-drained soils.
Many people have not yet applied N fertilizer
this year. That’s good because the N is safe in
the bin or the tank. It’s bad because there is
going to be a lot to get done in a short time.
We are now at or near planting conditions over
much of the state, and my bets are on the producers
who plant when conditions are right and
apply N (or finish applying N) later. This may require
a shift in equipment or N source. Δ