Abstract

Efficient N fertilizer management is critical for the economic production of wheat and the long‐term protection of environmental quality. A 3‐yr field experiment on a rainfed Vertisol was designed to study the effects of N fertilizer timing on the efficiency of N in durum wheat (Triticum turgidum L. var. durum Desf.). A single rate of 150 kg N ha−1 was used with different fractions being applied at planting, tillering, and stem elongation. A 15N experiment was also conducted within the main experiment area, with microplots, to quantify N uptake from fertilizer and soil. Mean wheat recovery of N fertilizer ranged from 12.7% when applied at sowing to 41.6% when applied as a topdressing at the beginning of stem elongation. The mean annual contribution of soil residual N and mineralization was 167 kg N ha−1, representing a considerable proportion of total wheat N uptake—ranging from 80.4% when N fertilizer was applied in the fall to 56.3% when it was applied at stem elongation. This would account for the poor and inconsistent response of grain yield and N efficiency indices, and for the importance of soil N in Vertisols for predicting wheat N fertilizer requirements, due to the carryover effect. It is recommended that N fertilizer be applied mainly as a topdressing in durum wheat, between tillering and stem elongation, to enhance crop N use efficiency (NUE) and reduce losses through leaching and runoff.

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