Abstract

Nitrogen (N) uptake at heading and at maturity was evaluated under four N treatments (20, 50, 110 and 160 kg N ha −1 at sowing) in four malting barley cultivars released to the market from 1944 to 1998 in Argentina. Grain N concentration was slightly lower in the newest cultivar than in the oldest one. Grain N yield showed cultivar × N interaction: modern cultivars tended to increase their grain N yield in response to N fertilization more than old cultivars. Grain N yield was correlated to grain yield as well as to total above-ground biomass. Nitrogen fertilization affected total N in above-ground biomass at maturity, but no differences among cultivars were found. Nitrogen harvest index of the most modern cultivar (0.76) was higher than that of the oldest cultivar (0.67). Modern cultivars tended to have a higher N content in ears at heading than old cultivars, and the magnitude of the differences increased with N availability. Physiological nitrogen efficiency for grain yield was significantly higher in the newest than in the oldest cultivar (57 and 43 g grain g N − 1 , respectively).

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