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1. FS Green Plan Lender's Review- Introducing Local Lenders to FS Green Plan Crop ProductionGeneral 1. Increase communications between local lending agency Objectives: personnel and member company staff. 2. Introduce the FS GREEN PLAN crop production program to lenders. Familarize them with what FS has to offer their farmer cl ients. 3. Show lenders how FS GREEN PLAN programs recommend optimum production inputs to maximize crop profits for farmers. 4. Emphasize the availability of economic and net income projections to the farmer and his banker through use of the GREEN PLAN program. 5.... |
2. Effect of Ammonia Knife Spacing on Corn YieldExperiments were conducted at DeKalb on a Drummer sicl, Dixon Springs on a Alford silt loam and Elwood on a Blaunt sicl to evaluate the effect of ammonia knife spacing at varying N rates and on different tillage systems on the yield of corn Nitrogen was awlied at 180 1bs N/acre at bath DeKalb and El& and at 210 lbs N/acre at Dixon Springs in the knife spacing by tillage study. In the rate by knife spacing by time of application study at DeKalb, the preplant nitrogen was placed under where the rows... |
3. Intensive Wheat Managent in the Corn BeltIntensive wheat management (ICX) is based on European cropping systems including narrow row spacing, precise seeding rates, multiple nitrogen (N) fertilizer application, fungicide application for disease control, and plant growth regulator (PGR) application for lodging control. Components of this cropping system were compared to current recommended management (CRM) practices with 12 varieties during 1986-87. The purpose for the experiment was to determine the responsiveness of soft winter wheat varieties... |
4. Hybrid and Potash Effects on Root Growth in Ridge-till CornPotassium deficiency symptoms often appear in ridge-till and no-till corn even when soil test values for potassium are high. Certain hybrids are morc sensitive to the problem than others. Two techniques were used to assess root activity arid density in a three year experiment at the West Central Experiment Station, Morris, MN. We compared two tillage systems (fall chisel and ridge till). two hybrids (Pioneer 3732 and 3737) and three fertilizer treatments (control and 40 IbIA banded or broadcast K,O).... |
5. A Systems Approach to High Yields, Efficiency and Profits in Corn, Wheat and Doublecropped Soybean RotationUsing a systems approach friendly to the environment, a three-crop/two-year no-till system has shown significiant yield increases in a three-year research project conducted at the Poplar Hill Research and Education Facility in Quantico, Maryland. In each case, corn, wheat, and doublecropped soybean yields exceeded average yields produced on Maryland's Delmarva Peninsula. Instrumental in producing these superior yields were enhanced fertility, supplemental water, and appropriate variety selection.... |
6. Comparison of Mehlich-3, Olsen, and Bray-P1 Procedures for Phosphorus in Calcareous SoilsFertilizer recommendations for P generally are based on soil testing. Although a variety of soil tests are reliable for evaluating plant available P of neutral or slightly acid soils. there is still uncertainty about appropriate soil tests and soil-test interpretations for calcareous soils. The Bray-P 1 and Olsen methods are the most widely used soil-test P methods in the North Central region. Extensive research has shown that the Bray-P1 test is reliable on neutral or acid soils but that it tends... |
7. Correlation and Calibratin of the SMP Lime Requirement Test with Direct Titration of Soil AcidityThe SMP Buffer method (Shoemaker, et al, 1961) of routinely determining lime requirement on soil samples has been used at the University of Kentucky Soil Testing Laboratory (UKSTL) since the mid-1960's. Initial correlation and calibration for Kentucky soils was a result of incubating several soil samples over a period of time after mixing different rates of lime with them (D.E. Peaslee, 1975, personal communication). During the ensuing years, county agricultural extension agents have raised many... |
8. Foliar Fertilization of SoybeansExtensive research addressed foliar fertilization of soybeans at reproductive stages during the 70s and 80s. The soybean plant has been characterized by markedly reduced root activity during late seed development and increased translocation of nutrients and metabolites fiom other tissue into the seed. This depletion of numents from leaves could result in decreased photosynthesis. leaf senescence. and lower grain yields. Researchers theorized that if nutrients were applied directly to the foliage... |
9. Corn and Soybean Response to Potassium Fertilization and PlacementI\ncreased adoption of conservation tillage, evidence of large within-field nutrient variability, and an apparent increase in the Frequency of crop potassium (K) deficiency symptoms in Iowa and other states have prompted questions about the effectiveness of current soil-test K interpretations and fertilizer recommendations. These questions relate to fertilizer placement and management of within-field nutrient variability. Broadcast placements are less costly than banded placements but they seem inefficient... |
10. Iowa Soil-Test Field Calibration Research Update- Potassium and the Mehlich-3 ICP Phosphorus TestIowa soil-test interpretations and fertilizer recommendations for phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) were last updated in 1999. The only change from previous recommendations (Voss et al., 1996; Voss and Mallarino, 1996) was to add interpretations for the Mehlich-3 (M3) P and K tests to existing interpretations for the Bray-1 P, Olsen P, and ammonium-acetate K tests (Voss et al., 1999). The interpretations for the ammonium-acetate and M3 K tests are similar because comparisons of amounts of K extracted... |
11. Relationship Between Soil P and P in Surface Runoff and Subsurface Drainage- An Overview of Ongoing ResearchNonpoint source pollution fiom agricultural fields has the potential to accelerate eutrophication of fieshwater ecosystems. In a report of water quality in the United States, the Environmental Protection Agency sited agriculture as the primary source of pollution in 60% of impaired river miles, 30% of the impaired lake acres and 15% of estuarine square miles @PA, 1998). Phosphorus, in particular, has received much attention due to its role as limiting nutrient in many fieshwater ecosystems (Correll,... |
12. Visual Correlation of Aerial Imagery with Topography and Crop YieldA study is currently being conducted on several farms to evaluate the usefulness of aerial imagery of soil and of a growing crop to delineate within-field management zones for the purposes of site-specific management. Presented is information for one site in Kent county Ontario for which correlations between aerial images taken of the soil and of the growing crop with the spatial patterns of measured topography, soil texture, and corn yield were examined. Visual interpretation indicated a very good... |
13. In-Furrow Starter and Broadcast Phosphorus and Potassium Fertilization for CornIncreasing awareness of potential impacts of farming on the environment has renewed interest in further study of fertilizer management strategies that reduce nutrient inputs. Fertilizer recommendations for phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) usually are based on soil-test values and nutrient removal with crop harvest. Many Midwest fmers follow these recommendations. but many others apply removal-based P and K fertilizer rates even in high-testing soils. The typical farmer applies P and K fertilizer... |
14. Soil-Test Potassium Field Calibrations for Soybean Iowa Interpretations and Research UpdateThere is a long history of potassium (K) fertilization research for soybean and other crops in the North-Central Region. Sustained Iowa field research efforts focused on developing soil-test K (ST10 interpretation and on studying impacts of K fertilization strategies on grain yield and STK. Because of changes in the soil-test K method used in Iowa, this information collected over time should be evaluated separately. The field crop response and STK calibration research conducted Erom the late 1960s... |
15. Swine Manure Phosphorus Use for Crop Production in IowaImproving manure phosphorus (P) management guidelines should result in a more efficient use of thls resource for crop production and in lower risk of P loss to surface water resources. Phosphorus fertilizers are widely used in crop production, there is a great deal of information about their use, and farmers have little doubt about their value to improve crop yield in low- testing soils. However, there is a great deal of uncertainty concerning the value of manure nutrients for crops and about cost-effective... |
16. Assessment of the Combined Effects of Soil pH and Carbonates on Soybean Yield and Development of Iron Deficiency ChlorosisSoybean is extensively grown in areas of the Midwest where fields often have areas of acid to calcareous soils intermingled in complex spatial patterns. Soil pH is highly buffered by carbonates, and measured pH usually ranges from 7.5 to 8.3 depending on the concentration of C02 and other factors. Soybean grown on high-pH calcareous soils often shows iron (Fe) deficiency chlorosis (IDC). Symptoms of IDC include yellowing of interveinal areas of young leaves and, as the deficiency becomes severe,... |
17. Should We Abandon Soil Testing and Yield Goals in Estimating Nitrogen Rates for CornIf the prices of corn and fertilizer-N and the shape of the N response function relating crop yield to the amount of fertilizer used are known, calculating an economically optimal N rate (EONR) for maximizing the net return to applied N is straightforward: the EONR is the N rate at which no firher increase in net return occurs. In most cropping systems and under common price scenarios, crop yield at the EONR is within 95 to 99% of the maximum yield obtained for the specific management package. In... |
18. Silage Specific Corn Hybrids for Silage Production in KentuckyFour corn hybrid types at three plant densities and two nitrogen rates were evaluated for forage yield, forage quality and ensiled quality. The four hybrid types included nutri-dense (ND), waxy (WX), leafy (LF), and dual-purpose (DP); while the three target plant densities were 54 000, 68 000, and 81 000 plants ha; and the nitrogen rates were 134 and 224 kg ha". WX consistently had low forage and grain yields compared with the otl~er types. When averaged over nitrogen rate and hybrid: plant density... |
19. Starter Potassium for Corn: Why and WhenStarter fertilizer application can complement broa dcast P and K fertilization for corn and other crops. Questions about its use relate mainly to the conditions in which it is most effective (such as soil-test level, tillage syst em, and broadcast fertilization rates among others), application methods and rates that do not damage seedlings, and nutrient ratios. Many studies in Iowa and the Midwest have shown that starter mixtures (usu ally N-P or N-P-K) often increase early corn growth. Corn yield... |
20. Foliar Fertilization and Fungicide Application for SoybeanConcerns over fungal diseases in soybean have renewed interest in applying pesticides for disease control with the goal of increasing grain yi eld. Interest has especially been sparked by discussions of the possibility of Asian Soybean Rust (Phakopsora pachyrhizi) spreading north to the North Central region. Because of increasing prices of soybean grain and traditional fertilizers, many Midwest grower s are considering mixing fluid fertilizers and fungicides for foliar application to soybean. Extensive... |
21. Testing Field-Moist Soil For Potassium And Other Nutrients - What's It All About?Potassium (K) is present in the soil in water-soluble, exchangeable (both readily available for crops), non-exchangeable or fixed (may become available over time), and mineral (unavailable) forms. Estimates of soil exchangeable K with the ammonium-acetate and Mehlich-3 extractants from air-dried or oven-dried soil samples are the most widely used soil-test methods for K. These methods provide comparable K test results, and are suggested for the north-central region by the North-Central Regional Committee... |
22. Plant Availability of Phosphorus From Struvite Produced During Corn Bioenergy ProcessingThere is strong interest on recovering nutrients from the waste stream of industrial processing of crop biomass for bioenergy so they can be efficiently utilized as fertilizer materials. Phosphorus (P) can recovered as struvite [NH 4Mg(PO4).6H2O] from the aqueous stream. A low P water- solubility in struvite and previous research with the pure mineral or struvite precipitated from liquid animal manure suggest a slow-release of P from struvite. However, a recent short-term greenhouse study in Iowa... |
23. Potassium Management, Soil Testing and Crop ResponseNew field research is conducted in Iowa as issues or questions arise to assure that nutrient management guidelines are up to date and to address new issues. This article briefly summarizes two major projects with potassium (K) whose results are useful to improve the efficacy of nutrient management and crop production. One project focused on correlating soil-test K methods with response of corn and soybean to fertilization and on obtaining better estimates of the concentration of K in corn and soybean... |
24. Management Zone Delineation Techniques to Aid In-Season Sensor Based Nitrogen ApplicationThe increased efficiency of nitr ogen fertilizer (N) use has been a long-term goal in reduction of nitrate contamination in the stat e of Nebraska. Preliminary rese arch has shown sensor based in- season application of nitrogen has the ability to be economic and environmentally viable. Although benefits have been published there is an opportunity for increased accuracy of N application through the integration of preprocesse d georeferenced management zones. In-season sensor based N application relies... |
25. Drainage Management and Nitrogen LossNitrate-N loss through subsurface agricultural draina ge is of local and regional concern in the Midwest. Good drainage and nitrogen management practices have the potential to reduce nitrate- N concentrations and loss from subsurface drainage systems. The five year (2005-2009) nitrogen management study in Pocahontas County, IA suggests that while fall application of fertilizer may result in higher nitrate-N concentrations than spring application during certain period of the growing season; overall,... |
26. A Smorgasbord of Preliminary Results from Field Trials in OntarioField scale trials may be established to support lo cal needs, but the results seldom reach a wider audience. This paper summarizes two recent fiel d studies by staff of the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs (OMAFRA) on fertilizer use in soybeans and corn. A study of starter fertilizer response in soybeans found that yield responses to fertilizer tended to be relatively small, and seldom large enough to cove r the cost of the added fertilizer. A second study of ammonia volatilization... |
27. Long Term Phosphorus Studies and How they Effect RecommendationPhiosophiesProfitable crop production requires adequate levels of phosphorus (P) and other nutrients. Careful planning is required because of volatile grain and fertilizer prices and increasing public concerns about water quality impa irment due to excess nutrient loss from fields. Higher fertilizer prices may not be a major issue as long as the hist orical ratio between crop and fertilizer prices is approximately maintained, becomes more favora ble, or increases can be predicted. Largely unpredictable price... |
28. Chloride Fertilization on Wheat, Corn, and Grain SorghumResearch in the Pacific Northwest and the Northern Great Plains has documented positive cereal grain responses to chloride (CI) fertilization. Field research was conducted in Kansas evaluating CI fertilization on winter wheat, corn, and grain sorghum. Chloride fertilization consistently and significantly increased plant CI concentrations in all crops. Chloride fertilization increased grain yields or one or more winter wheat cultivars at 3 of 4 sites. The most dramatic yield increases were at the... |
29. Do cover crops improve soil health and enhance nutrient availability to cash crops?Bare soils are prone to erosion and lose soluble nutrients. Cover crops provide protection to the soil against erosion and nutrient loss. We hypothesized that the cover crops should uptake available nutrients from the soils in the fall when there is no cash crop, assimilate the nutrients in their tissues, and in the following spring, should release the nutrients back to the soil during the next cash crop growing season. In our study, we are quantifying the nutrients taken up by the cover crops... D. Sanyal, A. Rahhal, H. Bielenberg, J. Wolthuizen, J. Clark, A. Bly |
30. Soybean Response to Potassium Fertility and Fertilizer in ManitobaSoybean acres have increased greatly in Manitoba in recent years, now occupying more than 25% of the province’s annual crop land. Potassium removal by soybean is greater than any other crop grown in Manitoba (1.1 – 1.4 lb K2O/bu). This large removal, accompanied by the large and rapid expansion in soybean acres, has contributed to an increase in province-wide potassium removal rates and likely explains the increase in incidence of potassium deficiency symptoms reported in recent years.... M. Bourns, D. Flaten, J. Heard, G. Bartley |
31. Integrating Management Zones and Canopy Sensing for Improved Nitrogen Recommendation AlgorithmsActive crop canopy sensors have been studied as a tool to direct spatially variable nitrogen (N) fertilizer applications in maize, with the goal of increasing the synchrony between N supply and crop demand and thus improving N use efficiency (NUE). However, N recommendation algorithms have often proven inaccurate in certain subfield regions due to local spatial variability. Modifying these algorithms by integrating soil-based management zones (MZ) may improve their accuracy... J. Crowther, J. Parrish, R. Ferguson, J. Luck, K. Glewen, T. Shaver, D. Krull, L. Thompson, N. Mueller, B. Krienke, T. Mieno, T. Ingram |
32. Comparison of Ground-Based Active Crop Canopy Sensor and Aerial Passive Crop Canopy Sensor for In-Season Nitrogen ManagementCrop canopy sensors represent one tool available to help calculate a reactive in-season nitrogen (N) application rate in corn. When utilizing such systems, corn growers must decide between using active versus passive crop canopy sensors. The objectives of this study was to 1) determine the correlation between N management by remote sensing using a passive sensor and N management using proximal sensing with an active sensors. Treatments were arranged as field length strips in a randomized complete... J. Parrish, R. Ferguson, J. Luck, K. Glewen, L. Thompson, B. Krienke, N. Mueller, T. Ingram, D. Krull, J. Crowther, T. Shaver, T. Mieno |
33. Cover crops nutrients uptake did not cause yield loss in cornBare soils are susceptible to erosion and nutrient loss. Cover crops and residues provide physical protection against erosion and nutrient loss, and improve nutrient cycling as well as biodiversity. We hypothesized that cover crops store available nutrients from the soil in the fall and release them the next spring for the next cash crop, minimizing potential nutrients loss with no adverse effect on cash crop yield. A four site-year study throughout South Dakota was conducted to compare... |
34. Can Cover Crops Help to Improve Soil Health While Having a Positive Effect on Corn Grain Yield?Cover crops have recently gained attention in the U.S. Mid-west because of their potential to increase soil organic matter and improve overall soil health. There is some concern however, that cover crops may negatively impact corn grain yield. This study was conducted to determine the effects that different cover crop mixtures have on soil health measurements and corn grain yield at increasing nitrogen rates. Cover crops were planted in the fall as a dominantly grass mixture, dominantly... |
35. Evaluation of Plant-Available Phosphorus of Dried Residuals from Wastewater Processed for Phosphorus Reduction with Aluminum or IronABSTRACT Wastewater effluent from industrial and municipal water treatment plants requires phosphorus (P) removal before being discharged to surface waters. The resulting residual materials, with elevated P concentration, are usually land applied. Basing P application rates on the nutrient value for crops is the most rational way to utilize this P resource because it would improve farmers economic return while... |
36. High Gypsum Application Rates Impacts on Iowa Soil Properties, Dissolved Phosphorus Loss, and Crop YieldGypsum (calcium sulfate) is a common sulfur (S) source for crops and rates in the northcentral region seldom are > 250 lb/acre. It is known that even higher gypsum rates do not raise soil pH. Research in eastern or southeast states showed that in some conditions high gypsum rates can improve other chemical or physical properties and can reduce dissolved phosphorus (P) loss from fields. However, little research has evaluated potential benefits in prairie-developed soils of Iowa and the region.... A.P. Mallarino, M.U. Haq |