Ontario Grain Farmer December 2024 / January 2025

N Treatment N Rate (lb-N/ac) Yield (bu/ac) Lower N Rate 126 212 Normal N Rate 158 227 Higher N Rate 189 229 It’s the end of another season. The idea of “report cards” may not exactly evoke excitement, but think about a nitrogen (N) rate report card as a good one – one that might deliver confidence around nitrogen rate decisions on your farm. There are lots of good tools used to guide nitrogen rate decisions (nitrogen credits, pre-sidedress-nitrate tests, rainfall, soil types, etc.), but at the end of the day, the only way to truly get a handle on optimum nitrogen rates on your own farm is to collect yields from some different nitrogen rates. This can be very simple. One of the easiest ways might be the “30-pound” test, that is, three side-by-side applicator-width strips of the following (Figure. 1): i) 30 lb-N/ac lower than normal N rate ii) your normal N rate iii) 30 lb-N/ac higher than normal N rate 15 ONTARIO GRAIN FARMER DECEMBER 2024/JANUARY 2025 Your nitrogen rate report card CROP SIDE WITH... Ben Rosser Crop side Ben Rosser, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Agribusiness Corn Specialist Figure 1. Example layout of N rate strips in a field. Apply these rates in whatever way works best. Ideally, replicate these plots at least twice. Remember where they are and collect yields from each one at harvest. As yields have trended up over time, one grower in Elgin County wanted to know if he should be applying more N than his traditional rate of 158 lb-N/ac. In 2023, he applied treatments very similar to the 30-lb test (Table 1). Results showed that his normal nitrogen rate appeared sufficient even in a very high yielding and wet year like 2023. Relative to his normal nitrogen rate: Table 1. “Nitrogen rate report card” from three nitrogen rates tested by grower in Elgin County in 2023. i) Lowering nitrogen rates (-32 lb-N/ac) resulted in yield losses (-15 bu/ac) that were much more costly than the N saved ii) Increasing nitrogen rates (+32 lb-N/ac) resulted in little extra yield (+2 bu/ac) and certainly not enough to pay for the extra nitrogen applied These results gave the grower good confidence that his normal nitrogen rates were enough to meet the needs of the area tested, even in a very high-yielding and high rainfall year (Figure 2). We know optimum nitrogen rates vary year to year, even within a relatively small area of a field. It would be good to repeat these strips over time (and maybe space) to compare nitrogen across various environments. • Figure 2. Nitrogen rate strips in a field in Elgin County in the high rainfall year of 2023. 30 lb-N/ac Lower than Normal Normal N Rate 30 lb-N/ac Higher than Normal

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