It is not worthwhile to fertilize sweet sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L. Moench) with cattle slurry: productivity and nitrogen-use efficiency.

2014 
Abstract Sweet sorghum ( Sorghum bicolor L. Moench) is a viable alternative to maize when irrigation water is unavailable or too expensive. In areas with intensive livestock activities animal slurries are predominantly applied to maize. Although sweet sorghum is fairly investigated species, little is know about the efficiency with which the crop can use nitrogen (N) applied in the form of cattle slurry. Then, a field experiment was devised to explore the following research questions: (i) what is the effect of cattle slurry and industrial fertilizers on sweet sorghum productivity? (ii) which is the N-use efficiency for cattle slurry and industrial fertilizers applied to sweet sorghum? The study was conducted in the years from 2008 to 2012 (five years) in the alluvial plain of the Po Valley, Northern Italy. The fertilization treatments applied annually were: (i) no fertilization (control); (ii) industrial fertilizers 120 kg N ha −1 , applied in the form of urea, +52 kg  P ha −1 , applied in the form of superphosphate, (IF); (iii) cattle slurry 10 mm, i.e. 10 L m −2 (CS10); and (iv) cattle slurry 20 mm, i.e. 20 L m −2 (CS20). The indigenous soil N supply varied from 112 to 243 kg N ha −1 . The experiment was not irrigated. The observed average annual yields were, in decreasing order: 34.6 Mg DM ha −1 in 2008, 31.7 in 2011, 29.5 in 2009, 27.9 in 2010 and 27.2 in 2012. Physiological efficiency applied N (PE N , kg yield increase per kg N uptake), recovery efficiency applied N (RE N , kg N uptake increase per kg N applied) and agronomic efficiency of applied N (AE N , kg yield increase per kg N applied) were evaluated in this study. In the range of observed values the PE N was 63 kg DM yield per kg N uptake, the RE N varied from 0 to 0.33 and the AE N was zero in all the years of experiment. Fertilization tends to increase N uptake but not yield nor stem juice sugar content. Our findings indicate that under conditions of good soil fertility, sweet sorghum should be considered poorly suited to receive cattle slurry application, due to the absence of yield gain and to the low N-use efficiency. Moreover, the high N uptake achieved by the crop with no fertilization, combined with the modest RE N suggest the animal slurry should rather be applied to crops possessing higher efficiency in utilizing N applied with fertilizers. Nevertheless, the frugality of sweet sorghum should be considered a virtue in the light of the increasing interest in reducing the input for energy crop production.
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