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Plant sciences, sustainable farming systems and food quality
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Sowing date and varietal effects on the N2 fixation of field pea and implications for improvement of soil nitrogen

GE O'Connor, J Evans, NA Fettell, I Bamforth, J Stuchberry, DP Heenan and PM Chalk

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 44(1) 151 - 163
Published: 1993

Abstract

Dry matter, biomass N, N2 fixation (determined by the 15N isotope dilution method), grain yield and grain N, were determined for five pea cultivars grown with three sowing times at six sites in south-eastern Australia. Earlier sowing (late April to early May) increased N2 fixation (by as much as 96 kg N/ha compared to sowing in late June to early July). Early sowing improved the probability of peas contributing to soil total N. The potential increment in soil N from the pea stubbles left after harvesting grain, averaged over the varieties, was as high as 98 kg N/ha with early sowing, and as low as -38 kg N/ha with late sowing. The benefits from earlier sowing were due to larger dry matter production with a higher N concentration and a greater proportion of plant N from N2 fixation. Varietal variation in fixed N and potential for augmenting soil total N, was generally smaller than the variation in these parameters due to different sowing dates.

Keywords: N2 fixation; pea; sowing date; variety; nitrogen; Pisum

https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9930151

© CSIRO 1993

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