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Use Corn Stalk Nitrate Tests To Evaluate N Management

Sep 26, 2016
By Charles Shapiro 
Extension Soil Scientist—Crop Nutrition
 
Late-season corn stalk nitrate tests taken at physiological maturity can be a valuable tool to assess your nitrogen management program. They can help determine how much applied nitrogen remained post-harvest and, when used along with your knowledge of field and cultural practices, can help you fine-tune your soil management strategy and possibly adjust your application rates next year, The test, developed by researchers at Iowa State University, is best used in corn fields where moisture was not a limiting factor.
 
This year may be particularly interesting since heavy rains earlier in the year, particularly in eastern Nebraska, may have contributed to increased nitrogen leaching below plant-available levels. Given the wet conditions, nitrogen applications planned to be applied through irrigation, may not have been made.
 
I have seen where late season nitrogen was in the plant stalks, but did not affect yield. I have also seen, mostly on sandy ground, where low stalk nitrates (below 700 ppm) did not indicate N deficiency, but effective utilization of all the nitrogen in the plant.
The best use of this test is to compare different treatments, such as a strip trial where extra nitrogen was applied sidedress. The information from the stalk nitrate test is best interpreted with yield data and used as part of your overall nitrogen management assessment.
 
For more information on how to take the test in your fields, and how to interpret the results and consider the findings when planning next year's nitrogen management, please see this archived CropWatch article: Does your Current Corn Nitrogen Strategy Deserve an A or a D?
 
 Preserving sample
Collecting Field Samples
(Top) Take corn stalk samples as early as when the milk line is one-fourth of the way down the kernel and up to three weeks after black layer formation in 80% of the kernels. Take an 8-inch segment of cornstalk from 6 inches to 14 inches above the ground. (Lower) Stalk samples should be kept cool and wrapped in paper rather than plastic to avoid mold.