Modern Corn Hybrids More Resilient to Nitrogen Stress
Modern Corn Hybrids More Resilient
to Nitrogen Stress
In an analysis of 86 field
experiments, agronomists found that corn hybrids released after 1990 prove more
resilient than their predecessors in multiple ways. Modern hybrids maintain
per-plant yield in environments with low nitrogen, can bounce back from mid-season
stress and have an improved ability to take up nitrogen after silking, even if
they suffered from nitrogen deficiency during flowering.
The study suggests reserving a
portion of nitrogen fertilizer to apply later in the season could be a good bet
for growers, said Tony Vyn, professor of agronomy.
"This is like
insurance," he said. "Previously, withholding some of your nitrogen
for later could be perceived as a risky venture -- you don't want to
inadvertently cause nitrogen deficiency. But this paper suggests that with
modern hybrids, that risk is lower." Nitrogen is an essential building
block of plant proteins and plays a vital role in boosting grain yields. It's
also notoriously mobile, said Sarah Mueller, doctoral student in agronomy and
first author of the study.
"Once that nitrogen is in
the soil, you start losing it," she said.
Growers want to keep the costly
fertilizer in their fields and crops and prevent the loss of excess nitrogen to
the atmosphere and water systems where it can cause environmental damage. But
synchronizing nitrogen applications with plants' nitrogen uptake remains a
challenge.
Mueller and Vyn's review offers valuable
insights into how modern corn hybrids differ from pre-1990 varieties in their
uptake of nitrogen and response to nitrogen deficiencies. Understanding these
differences can help growers improve corn yields by maximizing nitrogen
accumulation and applying nitrogen fertilizers more efficiently. The study
showed modern hybrids do more with less: They maintain grain yield on a per
plant basis even when planted at higher densities than their predecessors -- an
average of 30,000 plants per acre compared with 20,000 -- and despite average
nitrogen fertilizer application rates remaining the same.
"These plants are able to
maintain yield in the face of plant density stress and nitrogen stress,"
Mueller said. "That's pretty impressive and speaks to the overall resilience
gains of modern hybrids." The research also shows modern hybrids take up a
substantial amount of new nitrogen as their grain develops. Modern corn hybrids
take up about 36 percent of their total nitrogen after silking, compared with
about 30 percent in older hybrids.
This late-season nitrogen uptake
raises questions about whether splitting nitrogen fertilizer applications --
rather than applying once early in the season -- is a viable option for
growers.
"These fundamental genetic
changes could give us the opportunity for more flexibility in timing nitrogen
applications," Vyn said. "We're researching this further because
there could be gains in nitrogen fertilizer efficiency that could improve corn
productivity and benefit the environment."
Vyn and Mueller cautioned that
growers shouldn't shortchange their nitrogen applications, trusting modern
hybrids to recuperate, but rather think about how reserving some nitrogen for
later might prove advantageous in both optimum and adverse growing conditions.
Forty-three percent of the
experiments analyzed were in the United States, and 32 percent were in China,
with the remainder spread across the globe.