Fertilizer Facts: September 1995, Number 7

Grass Response to N Fertilizer

Jeff Jacobsen, Scott Lorbeer, Harold Houlton and Gregg Carlson
Dept. of Land Resources & Environ. Sci. and Northern Ag Res. Center
Montana State University

Grass yield and quality response to nitrogen (N) fertilizers is dependent on plant available nutrients, water, climate and other agronomic factors. Fertilizer application can be a key management tool, if soil test levels are less than optimum, economics are favorable, and the environment will not be adversely impacted.

Two dryland grass experiments were conducted at the Northern Agricultural Research Center (48o 30' N; 109o 47' 30" W) at Havre, MT, to evaluate grass specie response to a single N application. Both used ten common grass species (basin wildrye (BWI), beardless wheatgrass (BWH), crested wheatgrass (CWH), green needlegrass (GNE), "Greenar" and "Oahe" intermediate wheatgrasses (GIW & OIW), pubescent wheatgrass (PWH), Russian wildrye (RWI), thickspike wheatgrass (TWH and western wheatgrass (WWH)) that were seeded in the early spring and fertilized in the fall. Nitrogen fertilizer (34-0-0) was applied in Trial 1 at 0, 50 and 100 lbs N/a and in Trial 2 at 0, 100, and 200 lbs N/a. Dry matter production was measured after the first year of production and annually for four years.

Cumulative Production

In both trials, N fertilization increased forage production (Table 1). In Trial 1, averaging all species, cumulative yield over the 4 years increased from 5384 lbs/a for the check to 6580 lbs/a with 50 lbs N/a, and to 6867 lbs/a with 100 lbs N/a. If only the four greatest producing grasses are considered, cumulative yield increased from 6216 lbs/a for the check to 8148 lbs/a with 50 lbs N/a, and to 8427 lbs/a with 100 lbs N/a.

Table 1. Cumulative 4-year yields for two trials.

 

Grass

 

N Rate

Cumulative Yield

Trial 1

Trial 2

 

---- lbs/a ----

BWI 0
50
100
200
4800
5770
6004
3438

5743
6127
BWH 0
50
100
200
4073
4646
4768
3304

5646
7353
CWH 0
50
100
200
6231
7535
7852
5573

10036
13400
GNE 0
50
100
200
6001
6442
6886
3335

5658
7177
GIW 0
50
100
200
6669
7897
8664
4037

7975
9186
OIW 0
50
100
200
6557
9056
9717
5019

9199
10433
PWH 0
50
100
200
5408
8103
7476
3641

7213
8626
RWI 0
50
100
200
4273
5339
5451
2859

5438
6653
TWH 0
50
100
200
5770
6090
7151
3542

6288
7550
WWH 0
50
100
200
4054
4921
4702
3253
6047

7388


In Trial 2, averaging all species, cumulative yield increased from 3800 lbs/a for the check to 6924 lbs/a with 100 lbs N/a, and to 8389 lbs/a with 200 lbs N/a. Again, looking only at the four greatest producers, cumulative yield increased from 4567 lbs/a with the check to 8606 lbs/a with 100 lbs N/a, and to 10411 lbs/a with 200 lbs N/a.

A single N fertilizer application continued to show a response in some cases four years after application. Apparently, if growing conditions are poor, residual N remains in the soil/plant system, increasing production in subsequent, more favorable years. The N response was greater in Trial 2 due to the more favorable timing of precipitation (Table 2).

Table 2. Comparison of annual yields in two trials at two rates.

10 grass average
N Rate

Year 1

Year 2 Year 3 Year 4
 

----------- lbs/ac ------------

Trial 1 0
100
780
918
1978
2579
1335
1820
1291
1549
Trial 2 0
100
1539
3663
627
1356
564
666
1071
1239


N Response by Species

The individual species responded differently to N applications. Crested wheatgrass, both intermediate wheatgrasses and pubescent wheatgrass produced large yields and consistently responded the most to N fertilization.


Fertilizer Use Efficiency

A fertilizer use efficiency (FUE) value was calculated as pounds of grass greater than the check per pound of applied N. In Trial 1, grasses treated with 50 lbs N/a were more efficient than 100 lbs N/a (23.9 and 14.8 lbs grass/lbs N, respectively), and in Trial 2, 100 lbs N/a produced more efficient response than 200 lbs N/a (31.2 and 22.9 lbs grass/lbs N, respectively).


Economic Implications

A simple cost-benefit analysis was made using prevailing values ($210 per ton N, $40 per ton hay). The fertilizer cost (without application cost) is $11.41, $22.82 and $45.64 per acre for 50, 100, and 200 lbs/a applications, respectively. In order to break even, a cumulative production increase of 570, 1140 and 2280 lbs/a is needed to offset just the fertilizer cost of 50, 100, and 200 lbs N/a, respectively. More simply, an 11.4 lb forage production increase is needed for every lb N applied to pay for the applied N.

In Trial 1, 50 lbs N/a produced this minimal level in 8 of 10 species with pubescent wheatgrass returning the most hay per fertilizer dollar, and thickspike wheatgrass the least. With 100 lbs N/a, 7 of 10 species produced more than the economic break even point with "Oahe" intermediate wheatgrass the most economical, and western wheatgrass the least. In Trial 2, all 10 species at both fertilization levels produced economic responses, with crested wheatgrass producing the most hay per fertilizer dollar and basin wildrye the least at both N levels. Clearly, to produce enough hay to justify the cost of fertilizer, the species composition, fertilizer rate, market factors and application costs needs to be carefully considered.

 

Fertilizer Facts