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35929

Barley Yield and Nitrogen Derived by Plants from Mineral and Organic Fertilizers with Application of 15N Stable Isotope.

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Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

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Abstract

A field experiment was carried out with constructed drip irrigation system on sandy soil to recognize the most proper nitrogen fertilization strategy that could be more benefits for barley production taking into consideration the economical and environmental impacts. Barley crop was significantly positively affected by nitrogen fertilizer rates and organic compost. Grain yield (45%) and shoot (11%), root (36%) dry weight were relatively increased with increasing N fertilizer rate. Plants fully fertilized with organic compost showed relative higher grain yield than those either received 100% or 50% N-mineral fertilizer which accounted for 37%. In this case, shoot and root dry matter yield were nearly closed to those of 50% N-fertilizer, but to some extent lower than those of 100% N-fertilized treatment. Plants treated with fully organic compost achieved N uptake by grains nearly closed to those obtained with high N fertilizer rate (70 kg N fed-1). Combined treatment of organic plus mineral-N did not reflect significant differences than those of plants fertilized with half N fertilizer dose. Portion of nitrogen derived from fertilizer (Ndff) and absolute value reflected higher values and percentage at rate of 100% fertilizer than those induced by 50% N rate. Ndff by grain, shoot and root of combined treatment were nearly closed to those achieved by 50% mineral-N rate. More nitrogen was derived from organic compost and still higher in grain than shoot and root systems. Nitrogen added at half dose combined with organic compost was efficiently used by grain and root recording values nearly closed to those recorded with plants treated by half mineral-N rate.

DOI

10.21608/jssae.2018.35929

Keywords

Barley, isotope dilution, mineral-N, 15N, N-rate, Organic compost

Authors

First Name

M.

Last Name

Soliman

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Affiliation

Soil Department, Faculty of Agriculture, Damietta University, Egypt.

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Volume

9

Article Issue

9

Related Issue

5888

Issue Date

2018-09-01

Receive Date

2018-09-10

Publish Date

2018-09-01

Page Start

427

Page End

432

Print ISSN

2090-3685

Online ISSN

2090-3766

Link

https://jssae.journals.ekb.eg/article_35929.html

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https://jssae.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=35929

Order

7

Type

Original Article

Type Code

889

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Journal of Soil Sciences and Agricultural Engineering

Publication Link

https://jssae.journals.ekb.eg/

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023