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Kilby, M
Bohl Bormann, N.L
Englund, R
Lundy, M
McIntosh, C
Storteboom, H
Collins, C
Gibson, R
Jones, C
Christensen, R
Kakkar, A
Litus, G
Miller, R
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Authors
Miller, P
Jones, C
Zabinski, C
D'Agati, K
Housman, M
Tallman, S
Miller, R
Brown, B
Gibson, R
Jones, C
Neill, K
Chen, C
Allison, E
Reese, C
Clay, D
Beck, D
Englund, R
Stark, J
Love, S
McIntosh, C
Walworth, J
Pond, A
Nunez, H
Wood, B
Kilby, M
Grossl, P
Koenig, R
Jones, C
Trolove, S
Jones, C
Griffith, D
Jackson, G
Jones, C
Lenssen, A
Chen, C
McVay, K
Stougaard, B
Westcott, M
Eckhoff, J
Weeding, J
Greenwood, M
Jones, C
Miller, P
Rick, T
McCauley, A
Miller, R
Jones, C
Miller, P
Tallman, S
Housman, M
Zabinski, C
Burgess, M
O'Dea, J
Bekkerman, A
Pettygrove, S
Lin, E
Putnam, D
Lundy, M
Orloff, S
Wright, S
Sterle, D
Litus, G
Stonaker, F
Ela, S
Davis, J
G. Davis, J
Wenz, J
Storteboom, H
Kakkar, A
Norton, J
Ouyang, Y
Svedin, J
Hansen, N
Kerry, R
Christensen, R
Hopkins, B
Clark, N
Lundy, M
Nelsen, T
Leinfelder-Miles, M
Light, S
Galdi, G
Getts, T
Mathesius, K
Collins, C
Loera, E
Reid, R
Spackman, J
Mathesius, K
Geisseler, D
Savidge, M
Lundy, M
Nelson, T
Andersen, N
Bohl Bormann, N.L
Wilson, M.L
Cortus, E.L
Janni, K
Silverstein, K
Gunderson, L
Topics
Soil Fertility and Soil Health Testing
Sensors and Other Technologies for Nutrient Management
General
Environmental and Agricultural Nutrient Management
Type
Oral
Poster
Year
2021
2007
2009
2011
2013
2015
2017
2023
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Authors

Filter results22 paper(s) found.

1. Is Cover Crop Species Mixture and Diversity More Important at Building Soil Health than Shoot Biomass in a Semi-arid Region?

Cover crop mixtures (CCMs) as partial fallow replacements have the potential to increase soil health, yet long-term studies on CCMs, especially in semi-arid environments are relatively rare. An eight-year study at two locations in semi-arid Montana sought to evaluate the effect of functional group (N fixer, tap roots, fibrous roots, brassicacae) and species richness (2, 6, and 8 species in a mix) on a range of biological, physical and chemical soil parameters. Although several soil health... P. Miller, C. Jones, C. Zabinski, K. D'agati, M. Housman, S. Tallman

2. Soil Test Interpretation: Saturated Paste, EC, SAR and CEC

Soils of neutral to alkaline pH of the Western United States often contain elevated levels of soluble salts and / or higher concentrations of sodium.  Elevated concentrations of soluble salts limit crop growth and sodium may impact water management.  Competent agricultural management of these soils is dependent on laboratory analysis of: soil soluble salts and there composition and the irrigation water soluble salt constituents.  Soil analysis based on the saturated... R. Miller

3. Nitrogen Availability and Use Efficiency in Corn Treated with Contrasting Nitrogen Sources

Nitrogen (N) is required in relatively large quantities for corn production and is often the limiting nutrient for growth and high yield. Improved understanding of N cycling in agroecosystems is essential for increasing N use efficiency (NUE) and sustainable food production. The transformations between organic N and inorganic N form a central part of the internal soil N cycle. Utah farmers grow approximately 990,000 tons of silage corn annually, which provides important forage in livestock and... A. Kakkar, J. Norton, Y. Ouyang

4. Creating Prescription Variable Rate Irrigation and Fertilization Zones: Water and Nutrient Management Interactions

Variable rate irrigation (VRI) and variable rate fertilization (VRF) technologies allow irrigation and fertilization rates to be spatially customized. VRF is widely adopted, but VRI is an emerging technology with minimal adoption. As water is often the driving force in nutrient cycling, our overall objectives are to evaluate VRI influences on VRF and vice versa; and to combine these technologies to significantly increase crop yield and quality, conserve water, and minimize environmental impacts... J. Svedin, N. Hansen, R. Kerry, R. Christensen, B. Hopkins

5. Cover Cropping in the Semi-arid West: Effects of Termination Timing, Species, and Mixtures on Nitrogen Uptake, Yield, Soil Quality, and Economic Return

Summer fallow still dominates some areas of the northern Great Plains (NGP), providing an opportunity to grow a partial season cover crop for increased soil health or nutrient availability. Over 12 years of research on single species cover crops in semi-arid Montana have revealed the benefits of early termination and multiple cover crop cycles on N availability, subsequent crop yield, soil health, and economic return. Due to high N fixation, pea cover crops have fairly consistently increased subsequent... C. Jones, P. Miller, S. Tallman, M. Housman, C. Zabinski, M. Burgess, J. O'dea, A. Bekkerman

6. Alfalfa Contributes More Nitrogen to Following Crop Than Previously Thought

Alfalfa in high-yielding environments fixes significant amounts of atmospheric N2, a portion of which benefits succeeding non-legume crops and reduces fertilizer N requirement by an amount sometimes called the “legume N credit”. Field research-based estimates of the legume N credit in California and other irrigated, semi-arid or arid environments are sparse in the literature. We conducted replicated plot experiments at three field station sites in California using wheat as an indicator... S. Pettygrove, E. Lin, D. Putnam, M. Lundy, S. Orloff, S. Wright

7. The Effect of Cyanobacteria Biofertilizer on Western Colorado Organic Peach Quality and Yield Characteristics

Nitrogen (N) is the nutrient needed by crops in the highest amounts and the production of synthetic N fertilizers contributes the highest proportion of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, when compared to other sectors of agriculture. Cyanobacteria are naturally occurring in most ecosystems and fix nitrogen gas from the atmosphere into forms which are useable by plants. Cyanobacteria was applied along with irrigation water to organically farmed peach trees (Prunus persica cv. Suncrest) as a... D. Sterle, G. Litus, F. Stonaker, S. Ela, J. Davis

8. Effects of Enhanced Mixing and Minimal Co2 Supplementation on Biomass and Nitrogen Concentration in a Nitrogen-fixing Anabaena Sp. Cyanobacteria Biofertilizer Production Culture

Nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria are attractive as a nitrogen fertilizer because they are ubiquitous in nature and have minimal nutrient requirements. Our lab is scaling up production of a local strain of the nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. in on-farm open raceways to determine its exonomic ppotential as a nitrogen fertilizer for horticultural crops. Our goal is to increase productivity in an organically certifiable growth medium above the current two week batch production levels... J. G. davis, J. Wenz, H. Storteboom

9. Effect of Nitrogen Rate and Cropping System on Soil Nutrient Levels in a Long-term Study

Diversified continuous cropping systems in semi-arid regions of the northern Great Plains may enhance sustainability. A study initiated in 2000 in southwest Montana was designed to evaluate crop productivity and economic returns for no- till and organic rotations that included small grains, pulses, and oilseeds. Our specific objective presented here was to compare soil nutrient differences from 2004 to 2012, to learn if economically superior rotations were building or depleting soil nutrients.... C. Jones, P. Miller, T. Rick, A. Mccauley

10. Reliability of Soil and Plant Analyses for Making Nutrient Recommendations

Nutrient management is dependent on the collection of soil and plant samples for analytical testing and assessment. The quality of the analytical test are subject to bias and precision of the measurements made by the testing laboratory. Failure to understand lab analyses uncertainty can lead to over confidence in the management recommendation. Test uncertainty varies by soil and plant test methods utilized and by performance capability of the testing laboratory. Generally soil methods that provide... R. Miller

11. Measured and Predicted Temporal Changes in Soil Nitrate-n Levels from Late Summer to Early Spring in Montana

Most soil sampling is conducted from August to November in Montana because of better soil sampling conditions and because it provides more time for growers to make fertilizer decisions prior to application. Fertilizer guidelines in Montana are based on spring nitrate-N levels in the upper 2 ft because they are more indicative of growing season available N than fall nitrate-N levels. It is not known how much nitrate-N levels change between late summer and spring, nor is it known what factors affect... C. Jones, A. Lenssen, C. Chen, K. Mcvay, B. Stougaard, M. Westcott, J. Eckhoff, J. Weeding, M. Greenwood

12. Phosphorus Dynamics in Organic Matter-amended Soils

Generally, phosphorus (P) is considered immobile in calcareous soils. Yet, numerous studies have found that the addition of organic wastes (e.g. manures) can enhance P mobility in these soils. We believe that the soluble organic matter present in these wastes increases P solubility by inhibiting the sorption of inorganic P on soil colloidal surfaces and subsequently preventing the formation of insoluble calcium phosphates. This results in increased P bioavailability. Likewise, tests used to assess... P. Grossl, R. Koenig, C. Jones, S. Trolove

13. Economic Model to Determine Optimum Nitrogen Rates for Small Grains

Nitrogen (N) fertilizer is generally the highest input cost for Montana grain growers; therefore, it has become imperative that a tool be developed to assist crop advisers and farmers in determining economically optimum N rates (EONR). Data from all available MSU-conducted N fertility trials were gathered for spring wheat, winter wheat, and barley. Only the data sets for dryland fields following fallow were deemed large enough to have confidence in any resulting models, and all other data were... C. Jones, D. Griffith, G. Jackson

14. Slow Release N for Irrigated Hard Red Spring Wheat Yield and Protein

Producing furrow irrigated hard red wheat with acceptable protein is challenging because of limited N management options for increasing protein. Slow release N has potential for improving N use efficiency in furrow irrigated hard wheat by avoiding the effects of excessive early season N yet providing later N for protein enhancement. A two year study (2005 and 2006) was conducted at Parma, ID to evaluate different N rates (120, 180 and 240 lb/A) of ESN and dry urea preplant N sources for furrow... B. Brown, R. Gibson

15. Tillage Effects on Phosphorus Availability

Vertical stratification of phosphorus (P) has been documented in both no-till and reduced tillage systems, yet very few studies have determined if this stratification has affected P uptake, and none of these studies have been conducted in Montana. Stratification of P was compared in 1.2 in layers in a small plot study composed of four tillage systems: long-term conventional (sweep) till (CT), 10-yr no-till (NT), 1-yr NT and 1-yr CT. Olsen P was measured in the upper 12 in., and a sequential extraction... C. Jones, K. Neill, C. Chen, E. Allison

16. Is Protein Enough for Assessing Wheat Flour Quality?

The quality of wheat products such as bread, bagels, noodles or pizza that consumers purchase is based on the flour quality used in production. Flours with different characteristcs are needed to produce different products and flour quality is important to produce a quality end product. However, at the initial stage of flour production, wheat is sold on a grain protein premium basis by farmers to elevators and eventually millers. In many years, higher protein (> 15% protein) wheat can bring... C. Reese, D. Clay, D. Beck, R. Englund

17. Evaluation of N Uptake Analysis As a Tool for Determing Potato N Status

Plant tissue testing has become the primary method for evaluating nitrogen availability for potatoes during the growing season. This study was conducted to determine if plant N uptake rates referenced to absorbed solar radiation could also be used as a tool to quantitatively assess plant N status of different potato varieties. Nitrogen fertilizer, as NH4NO3 (34-0-0), was applied to Russet Burbank, Gem Russet, Bannock Russet and Summit Russet at three rates (0, 100, or 300 kg N/ha) using two... J. Stark, S. Love, C. Mcintosh

18. Soil Zinc Application for Southwestern Pecan

Pecan trees grown in the alkaline soils of the southwestern United States are prone to zinc deficiency unless supplemental zinc is regularly applied. Standard treatment involves multiple foliar zinc applications. Soil zinc application would provide several advantages. A field study was initiated in 2005 with three soil zinc treatments: no zinc (control), ZnSO4 (74 kg.ha-1 Zn), or ZnEDTA (19 kg.ha-1 Zn) were applied one time in March, 2005 in bands 18 cm deep and 1.2 m on both sides... J. Walworth, A. Pond, H. Nunez, B. Wood, M. Kilby

19. Improved Small Grain Nitrogen Use Efficiency with California Site-specific Decision Support

Small grains are grown throughout the state of California (CA) on approximately 500,000 acres annually. They are generally fall-sown and grown during the winter months when most precipitation occurs. Because precipitation and irrigation patterns vary across CA and there is a strong interaction between total water and plant available nitrogen (N), determining fertilizer N application recommendations is particularly challenging in this cropping system. With recent fertilizer price volatility,... N. Clark, M. Lundy, T. Nelsen, M. Leinfelder-miles, S. Light, G. Galdi, T. Getts, K. Mathesius

20. Using Calcium Hydroxide for Lime Incubation Studies and Moisture Effects on Liming

Plant health and productivity are negatively affected by soil acidity. Soil physical properties such as soil texture, soil organic matter, and nutrient content help soils resist changes in their acidity (buffering capacity). Soils have different buffering capacities; agricultural producers need to know how responsive a soil is to lime and how much lime is required to modify a soil to a certain pH (lime requirement). One method to evaluate soil liming requirements and buffering capacity is to add... C. Collins, E. Loera, R. Reid, J. Spackman

21. Biosolids-based Fertilizers as a Nitrogen Source in California Small Grains Systems

Situation/ conditions In response to regulatory and economic pressure, California growers are becoming more familiar with nitrogen budgets. In addition to seeking out ways to improve nitrogen management strategies, growers can possibly benefit by incorporating alternative sources of nitrogen to feed their crops. Liquid injected or pelletized biosolids-based fertilizers from local waste streams and processing facilities are one source that growers are beginning to explore. As... K. Mathesius, D. Geisseler, M. Savidge, M. Lundy, T. Nelson, N. Andersen

22. ManureDB: Creating a Nationwide Manure Test Database

Manure nutrients serve an important role in crop production, however compared with commercial fertilizers there is a lack of standardized information. When exact manure values are not known, manure book values have been referenced. Recent data from midwestern United States (US) labs indicates manure nutrient levels have changed from book values published by Midwest Plan Service (2004) and American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers (2005). Manure laboratory analysis has improved... N.L. Bohl bormann, M.L. Wilson, E.L. Cortus, K. Janni, K. Silverstein, L. Gunderson