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Effect of granule size and the placement geometry on the efficiency of urea supergranules for wetland rice grown on a permeable soil

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Abstract

In a laboratory experiment 5 cm depth of water was allowed to percolate daily down through a 15 cm thick soil (Typic Ustipsamment) layer. It was observed that leaching losses of urea supergranules (USG)-N could be decreased by about 20% by the placement of four 0.25 g granules at four points instead of one 1 g granule at one point. In field microplots, the placement of approximately 30 granules of 0.30 g size instead of 9 granules of 1.00 g size resulted in reduced leaching of USG-N and, in turn, increased rice yield. In a follow-up field study, the advantage of more frequently placed USG was confirmed. As compared with 1 g USG placed in the usual manner in the center of four rice hills, increasing the density of placement in soil produced 15% more rice grain. Further increase in rice yield could be obtained by increasing the number of USG placed in the soil and decreasing the size of the granule from 1.00 g to 0.70 or 0.35 g. With USG of 0.35 and 0.70 g yields were equal or sometimes even slightly higher than with split application of prilled urea on a heavily percolating, low-CEC, light-textured soil.

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Katyal, J.C., Bijay-Singh & Vlek, P.L.G. Effect of granule size and the placement geometry on the efficiency of urea supergranules for wetland rice grown on a permeable soil. Fertilizer Research 15, 193–201 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01050681

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01050681

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