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Conventional Wisdom About Nitrogen Replenishment Is Challenged

Source: Stock And Land

By Neil Lyon

Nov. 12, 2011 -- Anecdotal evidence of soil nitrogen consistently being above expected levels in no-till, cereal-on-cereal farming systems raises questions over the established wisdom of how nitrogen replenishment works, according to Western Australian consultant and no-till advocate Bill Crabtree.

Crabtree said no-till farmers who, for a range of reasons, had been unable to include legumes in their rotations were finding that soil nitrogen levels were not depleting as fast as expected.

He said he’d observed the phenomenon in no-till farming systems internationally, including Western Australia where many producers had been forced to drop lupins from their rotations because of the crop’s poor yields and returns and the difficulty of managing weeds like radish and ryegrass.

“I have found that people who have kept all their stubble and not grown a legume in the system have more nitrogen in their soil than what we would expect them to have,” he said.

“A lot of people are now growing wheat/wheat/wheat/canola then wheat/wheat/wheat and we are not finding it crashing. In fact we are measuring good units of nitrogen in the soil.

“Some people will say they are getting the nitrogen out of the straw, but if the organic carbon is not going down across 10 years and you are harvesting 75 units of nitrogen (in the grain) every year and you are only putting on 25 units (in fertiliser) every year, then it has to be coming from somewhere.”

In such situations, farmers have found they have been able to dramatically cut back on the usual fertiliser top-up rates.

Crabtree challenged scientists and researchers at the Fifth World Congress on Conservation Agriculture in Brisbane to investigate why nitrogen levels were holding up under legume-free, cereal cropping regimes.

“Some scientists will think it is not possible to have a non-legume rotation and be fixing nitrogen,” he said.

“But the science community needs to work out why farmers are seeing what they are seeing.

“If we don’t there will be very good no-till farmers who get frustrated with the establishment who are disagreeing with them and they will go to ‘muck and mystery’ fertiliser companies and buy products that rarely add value to a farmer’s bottom line.”



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COMMENTS: 2
Organic N vs. synthetic
Posted from: Matthew Van Slyke, 11/22/11 at 6:45 AM CST
Ernie is correct about N fixing microbes. Conventional wisdom has been dumb to certain microbes' ability to convert insoluble organic N into water soluble form for uptake in continuous no-till.
N in no-till
Posted from: Ernie, 11/19/11 at 9:26 AM CST
It is not surprising that N seems more plentiful in no-tillage. Microorganisms are likenly "fixing" some of it; plus the N is more available to crops in the no-till soil environment. The net effect is very apparent. While an explanation would be good, the "academic" group should readily recognize it and then do a thorough study that will explain it. To jump to some theoretical answer quickly is both unnecessary and very likely wrong.

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