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Published online 1 September 1985
Published in Agron J 77:789-792 (1985)
© 1985 American Society of Agronomy
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Phosphorus Fertilization in No-Tillage Corn Production1

D. J. Eckert and J. W. Johnson2

The use of no-tillage crop production as a water quality management practice may be complicated by a tendency for phosphorus (P) to accumulate at or near the soil surface under no-tillage conditions. Little work has been published to define best management strategies for P in no-tillage situations, either from fertilization or water quality standpoints. In this study, P was applied to no-tillage corn (Zea mays L.) by surface broadcasting or subsurface banding, to a Wooster silt loam (fine-loamy, mixed, mesic Typic Fragiudalf) in northeastern Ohio at rates of 0, 14.5, and 29 kg P ha–1, and to a London silt loam (fine, illitic, mesic Aquic Hapludalf) in southwestern Ohio at rates of 0, 19, 39, 58, and 116 kg P ha–1. Soil test P levels were generally below sufficiency for maximum corn production at both sites. Over a 3-yr period at the Wooster site, both fertilized and unfertilized plots showed significant accumulations of P near the soil surface; however, subsurface banding reduced surface accumulation at the highest P rate. At both sites, banding P generally produced higher yields than broadcasting at equivalent rates. When yields, soil test P levels and fertilizer rates were fit to the Bray-Mitscherlich function, the resulting equations indicated greater fertilizer efficiency for band application. Comparison of equations derived from data in the present study with the equation used for making P fertilizer recommendations for conventional tillage in Ohio indicated the need for higher broadcast fertilizer rates in no-tillage and also a higher soil test P level for P sufficiency in no-tillage when compared with conventional. The advantages of banding and lower broadcast fertilizer use efficiency in no tillage seen in this study are contrary to conclusions drawn from previous studies dealing with no-tillage fertilization.

Key Words: Zea mays L. • Conservation tillage • Water quality • Soil testing • Nutrient distribution


1 Salaries and research support provided by state and federal funds appropriated to the Ohio Agric. Res. and Development Center, The Ohio State Univ., Wooster, OH 44691. Journal Article no. 158-84.

2 Assistant and associate professors, respectively.

Received for publication September 12, 1984.


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