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Nitrogen Use in Tifway Bermudagrass, as Affected by Trinexapac‐Ethyl

Authors :
Thomas W. Rufty
Fred H. Yelverton
Daniel C. Bowman
Matthew J. Fagerness
Source :
Crop Science. 44:595-599
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Wiley, 2004.

Abstract

Nutrient movement from turfgrass systems into surface and ground water is a public concern. Data indicate that actively growing turf rapidly immobilizes applied N, thus restricting nutrient movement. It is possible, however, that growth suppression with plant growth regulators (PGRs) could reduce N demand and thus N uptake, resulting in greater leaching losses. An experiment was conducted with column lysimeters to investigate the effects of trinexapac-ethyl (TE) on nitrate leaching and N-use efficiency in Tifway bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon × C. transvaalensis). The experiment was conducted in a growth chamber with day/night temperature set at 29/24°C and a 12-h photoperiod. Trinexapac-ethyl was applied twice at 4-wk intervals at 0.11 kg a.i. ha -1 . Ammonium nitrate (AN) was applied at 50 kg N ha -1 2 wk after each TE application, and again 6 wk after the second TE application. Separate sets of columns received 15 N-labeled AN for the first two applications. Irrigation was scheduled to provide a leaching fraction of 50%; leachate was collected after each irrigation and analyzed for nitrate and ammonium. Cumulative nitrate leaching was unaffected by TE after the first two N applications, but was reduced =60% by TE following the third N application. Trinexapac-ethyl reduced 15 N allocation to clippings by 25% and increased 15 N allocation to roots and rhizomes; total recovery of applied N in tissues was 65%. Results demonstrate chemical growth suppression with TE does not reduce N uptake or increase nitrate leaching from bermudagrass.

Details

ISSN :
14350653 and 0011183X
Volume :
44
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Crop Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f9ba1730ef2425ac9d73d196cc8c27b9