Growth, Herbage Accumulation, and Nutritive Value of ‘Tifton 85’ Bermudagrass as Affected by Nitrogen Fertilization Strategies
2017
Borges, Bernardo M. M. N. | Silveira, Maria L. | Cardoso, Saulo S. | Moline, Ederlon F. V. | Coutinho Neto, Andre M. | Lucas, Fabio T. | Muraoka, Takashi | Coutinho, Edson L. M.
Nitrogen fertilization affects ‘Tifton 85’ bermudagrass (Cynodon spp.) herbage accumulation (HA) and nutritive value; however, forage response may be affected by N fertilizer source, application levels, and environmental conditions. This 2‐yr study evaluated the effect of different N fertilization strategies on Tifton 85 bermudagrass responses in a tropical soil from southeast Brazil. Treatments were two N sources (ammonium nitrate [AN] and urea) applied at 0, 60, 120, 180, and 240 kg N ha⁻¹ harvest⁻¹. Fertilizer sources were enriched with ¹⁵N to quantify the recovery of fertilizer‐derived N. Forage was harvested at 30‐d intervals to evaluate HA and shoot N concentration. Leaf area index (LAI), intercepted photosynthetically active radiation (PARi), and chlorophyll index were measured 1 d before harvest. Ammonium nitrate and urea resulted in similar Tifton 85 HA. Maximum Tifton 85 HA (4.6 Mg ha⁻¹) was reached at the fertilization level of 210 kg N ha⁻¹ harvest⁻¹ while critical shoot N concentration, herein defined at 90% relative production, was 23.7 g kg⁻¹. Similarly, critical PARi and LAI were 71% and 4.7 m² m⁻², respectively. Nitrogen recovery in the plant and soil was greater for urea (52%) than AN (41%). Despite the relatively greater shoot N accumulation, N recovery decreased as N levels increased. Nitrogen application level should be adjusted to optimize HA, nutritive value, and N recovery.
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