163 research outputs found
Effectiveness of seed-soaked Cu, fall- versus spring-applied Cu, and Cu-coated P fertilizer on seed yield of wheat on a Cu-deficient soil
Non-Peer Reviewe
Do canola cultivars differ in sulphur fertilizer requirements for optimum yield, seed quality and S uptake?
Non-Peer Reviewe
Do we need to add more S fertilizer at high N rates for optimum canola yield, seed quality, and uptake of S and N?
Non-Peer Reviewe
Seedrow placement effects of different N rates on optimum and deep seeded canola using knives and shovels
Non-Peer Reviewe
Importance of balanced/appropriate fertilization on crop production and soil residual nitrate-N/quality
Non-Peer Reviewe
Effectiveness of elemental S fertilizers on canola after three annual applications
Non-Peer ReviewedPlants feed on sulphate-S, but now elemental S fertilizers (which cost less per unit of S than the sulphate-S fertilizers) are available for commercial use. The effectiveness of elemental S fertilizers depends on how quickly the S is oxidized in soil for effective plant uptake. A 4-year field experiment was initiated in 1999 on S-deficient soils at two sites in northeastern Saskatchewan to determine the relative effectiveness of elemental S (ES-90 and ES-95) and sulphate-S (Agrium Plus containing both elemental S and sulphate-S, and ammonium sulphate) fertilizers on yield of canola seed. The S fertilizers were applied at 10 to 20 kg S ha-1 rates in the previous fall or in spring at sowing. At both sites, canola showed S deficiency and seed yields increased with the sulphate-S fertilizers in 1999, 2000 and 2001. In 1999, there was no significant increase in seed yield from the elemental S fertilizers, though fall application tended to give slightly greater yield than the spring application at one site. In 2000 and 2001, elemental S fertilizers usually corrected S deficiency on canola and increased seed yields significantly over the zero-S control, but yields were less than the sulphate-S fertilizers in most cases in 2000 and in many cases in 2001, especially when the S fertilizers were applied in spring. Fall-applied elemental S usually had greater seed yield than the spring-applied elemental S at both sites in 2000 and 2001, and in some cases seed yields tended to be equal to sulphate-S fertilizers. Fall-applied ammonium sulphate produced lower seed yield than spring-applied ammonium sulphate in some cases. In summary, the results suggest that the elemental S fertilizers were not as effective as the sulphate-S fertilizers in increasing canola seed yields on S-deficient soils after three annual applications, particularly when the S fertilizers were applied in spring at seeding time
Potential of management practices and amendments to prevent nutrient deficiencies under organic cropping
Non-Peer Reviewe
Stubble burning and tillage effects on soil organic C, total N and aggregation in northeastern Saskatchewan
Non-Peer Reviewe
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