Emerging and Established Technologies to Increase Nitrogen Use Efficiency of Cereals
Nitrogen (N) fertilizers are one of the most expensive inputs in agricultural settings. Additionally, the loss of N increases costs, contributes to soil acidification, and causes off-site pollution of the air, groundwater and waterways. This study reviews current knowledge about technologies for N f...
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doaj-14f5c5e5d8074f7b853e0b82def6198b2021-04-02T04:25:36ZengMDPI AGAgronomy2073-43952016-04-01622510.3390/agronomy6020025agronomy6020025Emerging and Established Technologies to Increase Nitrogen Use Efficiency of CerealsJuan M. Herrera0Gerardo Rubio1Lilia Levy Häner2Jorge A. Delgado3Carlos A. Lucho-Constantino4Samira Islas-Valdez5Didier Pellet6Agroscope. Route de Duillier 50, Nyon 1260, SwitzerlandInstituto de Investigaciones en Biociencias Agrícolas y Ambientales (INBA-CONICET), Facultad de Agronomía, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires C1417DSE, ArgentinaAgroscope. Route de Duillier 50, Nyon 1260, SwitzerlandUnited States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, CO 80526, USAChemical Research Center, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo, Hidalgo 42076, MexicoDoctoral programme in Agricultural Chemistry, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid 28049, SpainAgroscope. Route de Duillier 50, Nyon 1260, SwitzerlandNitrogen (N) fertilizers are one of the most expensive inputs in agricultural settings. Additionally, the loss of N increases costs, contributes to soil acidification, and causes off-site pollution of the air, groundwater and waterways. This study reviews current knowledge about technologies for N fertilization with potential to increase N use efficiency and reduce its negative effects on the environment. Classic inorganic sources such as urea and ammonium sulfate are the major sources utilized, while controlled N release fertilizers have not been significantly adopted for cereals and oil crops. Microorganisms, with the exception of Rhizobium sp. in soybeans, are also not widely used nowadays (e.g., plant growth-promoting bacteria and cynobacteria). The interest in implementing new N fertilization knowledge is stimulating the development of sensors to diagnose the N status and decision support systems for integrating several variables to optimize sources, rates and methods of application. Among potential new technologies we identified the incipient development of nanofertilizers, nutrient formulations to coat seeds, and recycled nutrients. Furthermore, increasing concern about the environmental consequences of N may facilitate the implementation of innovations outside the farm such as more effective regulations to guide N fertilization and methods to manufacture N fertilizers that are more energy-efficient and less CO2 equivalent emitting.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/6/2/25nitrogen use efficiencynanofertilizersrecycled fertilizersslow N released fertilizers |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Juan M. Herrera Gerardo Rubio Lilia Levy Häner Jorge A. Delgado Carlos A. Lucho-Constantino Samira Islas-Valdez Didier Pellet |
spellingShingle |
Juan M. Herrera Gerardo Rubio Lilia Levy Häner Jorge A. Delgado Carlos A. Lucho-Constantino Samira Islas-Valdez Didier Pellet Emerging and Established Technologies to Increase Nitrogen Use Efficiency of Cereals Agronomy nitrogen use efficiency nanofertilizers recycled fertilizers slow N released fertilizers |
author_facet |
Juan M. Herrera Gerardo Rubio Lilia Levy Häner Jorge A. Delgado Carlos A. Lucho-Constantino Samira Islas-Valdez Didier Pellet |
author_sort |
Juan M. Herrera |
title |
Emerging and Established Technologies to Increase Nitrogen Use Efficiency of Cereals |
title_short |
Emerging and Established Technologies to Increase Nitrogen Use Efficiency of Cereals |
title_full |
Emerging and Established Technologies to Increase Nitrogen Use Efficiency of Cereals |
title_fullStr |
Emerging and Established Technologies to Increase Nitrogen Use Efficiency of Cereals |
title_full_unstemmed |
Emerging and Established Technologies to Increase Nitrogen Use Efficiency of Cereals |
title_sort |
emerging and established technologies to increase nitrogen use efficiency of cereals |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Agronomy |
issn |
2073-4395 |
publishDate |
2016-04-01 |
description |
Nitrogen (N) fertilizers are one of the most expensive inputs in agricultural settings. Additionally, the loss of N increases costs, contributes to soil acidification, and causes off-site pollution of the air, groundwater and waterways. This study reviews current knowledge about technologies for N fertilization with potential to increase N use efficiency and reduce its negative effects on the environment. Classic inorganic sources such as urea and ammonium sulfate are the major sources utilized, while controlled N release fertilizers have not been significantly adopted for cereals and oil crops. Microorganisms, with the exception of Rhizobium sp. in soybeans, are also not widely used nowadays (e.g., plant growth-promoting bacteria and cynobacteria). The interest in implementing new N fertilization knowledge is stimulating the development of sensors to diagnose the N status and decision support systems for integrating several variables to optimize sources, rates and methods of application. Among potential new technologies we identified the incipient development of nanofertilizers, nutrient formulations to coat seeds, and recycled nutrients. Furthermore, increasing concern about the environmental consequences of N may facilitate the implementation of innovations outside the farm such as more effective regulations to guide N fertilization and methods to manufacture N fertilizers that are more energy-efficient and less CO2 equivalent emitting. |
topic |
nitrogen use efficiency nanofertilizers recycled fertilizers slow N released fertilizers |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/6/2/25 |
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