Abstract

Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) is an attractive bioenergy crop option for eroded portions of claypan landscapes where grain crop production is marginally profitable. Topsoil thickness above the claypan, or depth to claypan (DTC), can vary widely within fields, and little information exists on its impacts on N management of switchgrass. Therefore, a study was conducted at the University of Missouri South Farm near Columbia, Missouri, to determine whether topsoil thickness influenced fertilizer N requirements of switchgrass. Switchgrass was planted in 2009 on main plots with a range of DTC classified as exposed ( 30 cm) and was harvested annually at postdormancy during 2011 to 2015. Three split-plot treatments were 0, 67, or 101 kg N ha−1 applied annually in May, and a fourth was three intercropped native legumes as the N source. Across years, the legume treatment apparently supplied no N because it produced the same or less switchgrass yield than the nonfertilized treatment. Topsoil proved valuable as switchgrass yield, nutrient removal, and profit usually increased as DTC increased. Fertilization with 101 kg N ha−1 on exposed, shallow, or moderate DTC and 67 kg N ha−1 on deep DTC was required to obtain the highest biomass yield, but it also increased nutrient removal. Strikingly, profit across years was negative for the legume treatment and highest with no fertilizer on all DTC classes. Therefore, improvements are needed before intercropped legumes are profitable, and N fertilization may be needed only periodically to maximize switchgrass profit on claypan soils.

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