News Links
More Ag News
- NCGA Releases Video
- National Ag Day-Week This Week
- More Veterinarian Student Loan Paydowns Coming
- Widespread spring flooding forecast
- NPPC Wants Mexican Trucks Rolling
- AFBF Wants to Put Foreign Worker Program on Pause
- Transportation Grants Released
- UL CertifiesE25 Pumps
- Farmer Cooperatives Want to Tell Story
- NFU Convention Ends Today
- Maker of Wheatware products files for bankruptcy
- Corps plans Missouri River spring pulse
- Nebraska district court upholds water tax
- Ag Secretary Talks Climate at NFU Meeting
- Secretary urged to improve CSP program
- National Ag Week – March 14-20
- Sage Grouse Protection Program Announced
- Dry Digesters Could Be Manure Management Option
- Improvement Funds Available for Older Bioenergy Plants
- USGC Finds Success in FOODEX Show
- Tyson Plant Resuming Production
- U.S. Beef and Pork Export market Sluggish
- Russia Re-Lists Pork Providers
- Animal Standards Fight Restarts in Ohio
- NCGA Backs Changes in Cuban Trade Restrictions
- Senators Want Action on Cuban Trade
- Groups Against GHG Regulation Under CAA
- Alternative View of Workshop Offered
- ASA Presents at Workshop
- Organizations Submit Statements
- Technology Successes Noted by Workshop Participant
- USDA-DOJ Competition Workshop Held
Ag News
Irrigated Wheat Gaining Popularity
Published Thursday, July 03, 2008 at 03:19 PM
Irrigated wheat is gaining popularity for several reasons: It will grow under limited irrigation, a situation many farmers are facing. And wheat prices have risen enough to cover the higher input costs associated with irrigation.
But while there’s a large database about dryland wheat production, there’s not much data on producing the crop under irrigation. Hergert hopes to remedy that.
At the recent field day at the High Plains Ag Lab near Sidney, Hergert reported on three years of research into improved nitrogen management for white wheat. The research is funded by the Nebraska Wheat Board. Test plots are located at Sidney, Alliance and Scottsbluff. The study will run for two more years.
Although the focus is white wheat, Hergert said the recommendations should apply to hard red wheat as well.
Also driving the need for research is the fact that farmers need to sharpen management skills. They face not only limited water supplies, but also rapidly increasing fertilizer prices. Hergert said the price of nitrogen has more than doubled in the past two years and phosphorus has nearly quadrupled.
One lesson that growers should take from these conditions is the importance of doing a good job of soil testing, according to Hergert. That means collecting samples down to a depth of 3 to 4 feet. Many growers collect only shallower samples, he said.
The UNL study compared several different fertilizer application timings:
* All preplant; * One-third preplant and two-thirds at the boot stage of plant development; * One-fourth preplant, one-half at boot stage, and one-fourth at joint stage,.
In addition to N timing, the study also compares different N rates. Full irrigation is applied at the High Plains Ag Lab and the Alliance site, and three different rates (4, 8 and 12 inches) are used at the Scottsbluff site.
Three years of research have resulted in some preliminary data about irrigated wheat’s response to different nitrogen timing and rates.
As far as timing, the top yields have come from the second option – one third of the fertilizer applied in the fall and two-thirds at boot stage, Hergert said.
As far as nitrogen rates, Hergert said maximum yields have been produced when the amount of residual nitrogen in the top 4 feet of soil, along with the applied fertilizer, totals 200 to 210 pounds of N per acre. Top N rates to maximize yield have not been higher than 100 pounds per acre, Hergert said. This is not as high as has been commonly assumed to produce high yields, he said.
© 2008 The Nebraska Rural Radio Association. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.






