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Department of Renewable Resources, Macdonald Campus, McGill Univ., 21 111 Lakeshore Road, Ste Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, Canada H9X 3V9
*Corresponding author.
ABSTRACT
Low fertilizer P use efficiency is a problem in crop production on acid soils, but efficiency can be affected by methods of fertilizer application. A field experiment was conducted on two eastern Canadian soils (fine-silty to fine, mixed, frigid Typic Humaquepts) with different pH (5.0 and 6.0 initially) to evaluate the effect of banding different rates of urea with acidic P fertilizers on corn (Zea mays L.) yield and fertilizer use efficiency. Three rates of urea (0, 30, and 60 kg N ha–1) banded with two sources of P (triple superphosphate [TSP] and monoammonium phosphate [MAP] at 38.7 kg P ha–1) or alone without P fertilizer, as control, were studied in 1990. In 1991, three rates of TSP (0, 19.4, and 38.7 kg P ha–1) were used in combination with the same three rates of urea to determine the effect of banding ratio of urea-N/TSP-P. The residual fertilizer effects of the 1990 treatment were investigated in 1991. Banding urea with TSP or MAP increased soil extractable P (Mehlich III). At the six-leaf stage, plant P concentrations and dry matter yield increased linearly with both banded N and P in the Ste. Rosalie soil, and quadratically in the Ormstown soil. Total N and P uptake by corn increased in both years by banding urea with TSP or MAP, and fertilizer P use efficiency increased by 40 to 80%. Urea banded with P increased grain yield in both soils. No interactions were found between banded N rates and P sources in 1990, and between banded N rates and P rates in 1991. Greater residual effects of P fertilizer were found on grain yields and P uptake where P was banded with urea compared with no urea.
Received for publication February 15, 1993.
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