Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T05:03:31.127Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Response of Pure Stands and Mixtures of Cereals and Legumes to Nitrogen Fertilization and residual effect on subsequent barley

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

I. Papastylianou
Affiliation:
Agricultural Research Institute, Nicosia, Cyprus

Summary

Two rotation field experiments of a single forage–cereal cycle each were conducted on a clay loam soil (Vertic Cambisols) in Cyprus in 1982–85. The forages in the first cycle (1982–84) were pure stands of vetch (Vicia saliva L.), peas (Pisum sativum L.) and oats (Avena sativa L.) and mixtures of each of the two legumes with oats at sowing ratios of 90:10, 75:25, 50:50 and 25:75 grown with 15, 30, 60, and 90 kg fertilizer N/ha. For the second cycle (1983–85) the same crops were used but with only two mixture ratios (legume:oats 90:10 and 75:25), and with 0, 15, 45 and 90 kg N/ha. Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) was the test crop after the forages in both cycles. Legumes did not respond to N fertilization, whereas the yields of the pure stand of oats and the mixtures increased. The legumes yielded more N but less dry matter than the cereals. The grain and N yields of barley were higher after legumes than after oats, with intermediate yields after the mixtures. Barley responded to residual N fertilizer, irrespective of whether it was applied on legumes, oats or mixtures in the previous year. When choosing the forage to be grown, farmers should consider (a) the need for roughage and protein, (b) the costs of N fertilizer for crops and of protein for animal feed stuff and (c) the rotational role of the crop.

Type
Crops and Soils
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1990

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Allos, H. F. & Bartholomew, W. V. (1959). Replacement of symbiotic fixation by available nitrogen. Soil Science 87, 6166.Google Scholar
Anderson, W. K. (1985). Differences in response of winter cereal varieties to applied nitrogen in the field. I. Some factors affecting the variability of responses between sites and seasons. Field Crops Research 11, 353367.Google Scholar
Association Of Official Analytical Chemists. (1975). Official Methods of Analysis, 12th edn (Ed. Worwitz, W.). Washington, DC: AOAC.Google Scholar
Barry, E. R., Brown, R. H. & Elliott, B. R. (1974). Cereal cyst nematode (Heterodera avenae) in Victoria: influence of cultural practices on grain yield and nematode populations. Australian Journal of Experimental Agri-culture and Animal Husbandry 14, 566571.Google Scholar
Broadbent, F. E., Nakashima, T. & Chang, G. Y. (1982) Estimation of nitrogen fixation by isotope dilution in field and greenhouse experiments. Agronomy Journal 74, 625628.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, A. L. & Russell, J. S. (1977). Crop sequential practices. In Soil Factors in Crop Production in a Semi-arid Environment (Eds Greasen, E. L. & Russell, J. S.), pp. 279300. Brisbane: University of Queensland Press.Google Scholar
Craig, L. De A., Wiebold, W. J. & McIntosh, M. S. (1981). Nitrogen fixation rates of alfalfa and red clover grown in mixture with grasses. Agronomy Journal 73, 996998.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De, R., Salim, Khan, Katti, M. S. & Raja, V. (1985). Fodder legumes affecting sequential crop production and fertilizer N use efficiency. Journal of Agricultural Science, Cambridge 105, 17.Google Scholar
Droushiotis, D. N. (1989). Mixtures of annual legumes and small-grained cereals for forage production under low rainfall. Journal of Agricultural Science, Cambridge 113, 249253CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eaglesham, R. J. A., Hassouna, S. & Seegers, R. (1983). Fertilizer-N effects on N2 fixation by cowpea and soybean. Agronomy Journal 75, 6166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ebelhar, S. A., Frye, W. W. & Bievins, R. L. (1984). Nitrogen from legume cover crops for no-tillage corn. Agronomy Journal 76, 5155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hadjichristodoulou, A. (1973). Production of forage from cereals, legumes and their mixtures under rainfed conditions in Cyprus. Technical Bulletin, Agricultural Research Institute, Nicosia, Cyprus, No. 14, 18 pp.Google Scholar
Hardarson, G., Zapata, F. & Danso, S. K. A. (1984). Effect of plant genotype and nitrogen fertilizer on symbiotic nitrogen fixation by soybean cultivars. Plant and Soil 82, 397405.Google Scholar
Hargrove, W. L. (1986). Winter legumes as a nitrogen source for no-till grain sorghum. Agronomy Journal 78, 7074.Google Scholar
Harmsen, K. (1984). Nitrogen fertilizer use in rainfed agriculture. Fertilizer Research 5, 371382.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jessop, R. S. & Mahoney, J. (1985). The effect of soilm nitrogen on grain legume yield and nitrogen fixation. Journal of Agricultural Science, Cambridge 105, 231236.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krentos, V. D. & Orphanos, P.I. (1979). Nitrogen and phosphorus fertilizers for wheat and barley in a semi-arid region. Journal of Agricultural Science, Cambridge 93, 711717.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laidlaw, A. S. (1980). The effects of nitrogen fertilizer applied in spring on swards of ryegrass sown with four cultivars of white clover. Grass and Forage Science 35, 295299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, J. C. Jr, Scott, J. S., Zary, K. W. & O'Hair, S. K. (1982). The influence of available nitrate levels on nitrogen fixation in three cultivars of cowpea. Agronomy Journal 74, 1418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osman, A. E. & Nersoyan, N. (1986). Effect of the proportion of species on the yield and quality of forage mixtures, and on the yield of barley in the following year. Experimental Agriculture 22, 345351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osman, A. E. & Osman, A. M. (1982). Performance of mixtures of cereal and legume forages under irrigation in the Sudan. Journal of Agricultural Science, Cambridge 98, 1721.Google Scholar
Papastylianou, I. (1988 a). The role of legumes in agri-cultural production in Cyprus. In Nitrogen Fixation by Legumes in Mediterranean Agriculture (Eds Beck, D. P. and Materon, L. A.), pp. 5563. Dordrecht: Martinus Nijhoff.Google Scholar
Papastylianou, I. (1988 b). The 15N methodology in estimating N2 fixation by vetch and pea grown in pure stand or in mixture with oat. Plant and Soil 107, 183188.Google Scholar
Papastylianou, I. & Puckridge, D. W. (1983). Stem nitrate nitrogen and yield of wheat in a permanent rotation experiment. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 34, 599606.Google Scholar
Papastylianou, I., Puckridge, D. W. & Carter, E. D. (1981). Nitrogen nutrition of cereals in a short-term rotation. I. Single season treatments as a source of nitrogen for subsequent cereal crops. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 32, 703712.Google Scholar
Seligman, N. G., Feigenbaur, S., Benjamin, R. W. & Feinerman, Dvora. (1985). Efficiency of fallow as a store for fertilizer nitrogen in a semi-arid region. Journal of Agricultural Science, Cambridge 105, 245249.Google Scholar
Summerfield, R. J., Dart, P. J., Huxley, P. A., Eaglesham, A. R. J., Minchin, F. R. & Day, J. M. (1977). Nitrogen nutrition of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata). I. Effects of applied nitrogen and symbiotic nitrogen fixation on growth and seed yield. Experimental Agriculture 13, 129142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trenbath, B. R. (1974). Biomass productivity of mixtures. Advances in Agronomy 26, 177210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar