Uptake, Distribution, and Remobilization of 15N‐labeled Urea Applied to Maize Canopies1
- 1 May 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Agronomy Journal
- Vol. 77 (3) , 412-415
- https://doi.org/10.2134/agronj1985.00021962007700030014x
Abstract
Field‐grown maize (Zea mays L.) plants (hybrid B73 X Mo17) were sprayed with 15N‐enriched urea to determine recovery and subsequent distribution within the plant. Plants were sprayed with 15N enriched urea at 7 days pre‐ (treatment 1) and post‐anthesis (treatment 2) to provide a total of 22.3 kg N ha−1 (350 mg N plant−1). Unsprayed plants were used as controls. Plots were located on Flannigan silt loam (fine, montmorillontic mesic Aquic Argiudoll) at stands equivalent to 63 800 plants ha−1. Timing of spray treatment had no effect on grain yield, stover weight, visible leaf senescence, or N content of the plant parts, relative to controls. About one‐third (29% in treatment 1, 30% in treatment 2) of the foliarly applied urea was absorbed and incorporated by the plant. The amounts and distribution patterns within plant parts of foliarly applied N and of total N (N derived from soil uptake and foliarly applied urea N) indicated that leaves were the organs of uptake, and that the stalk served as a conduit for passage of urea‐derived N from leaves to the ear rather than as a storage organ for foliarly applied N. The greater initial rates of loss and the final extent of depletion of N from leaves was greater for foliarly applied N than for total N. This indicated that the foliarly applied N was incorporated into a different pool of N than had been formed earlier by unenriched soil derived N. This observation provides possible explanation for the failure of foliar N applications to increase grain yields of maize.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: