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2022
Soybean Nitrogen fixation under Nitrogen and Sulfur fertilization
Category:
Sustainable Production
Keywords:
Parent Project:
This is the first year of this project.
Lead Principal Investigator:
Jonathan Kleinjan, South Dakota State University
Co-Principal Investigators:
Project Code:
Contributing Organization (Checkoff):
Institution Funded:
Brief Project Summary:
One question that researchers and producers are both asking is: Do high yielding
soybeans need to be fertilized with N? Soybeans require a substantial amount of N,
4 to 5 lbs. per bushel of grain. Biological N fixation (BNF) can only supply from 40 to
70% of what is required with the rest of the N coming from the soil. As growers produce
more soybeans in the 70 and 80 bu/acre range, or the environment becomes more
stressful, both BNF and soil reserves may not be able to supply enough N and could
become limiting, thus the potential for supplemental N response will become more
common.
Responses from applied N are inconsistent and unpredictable. This unpredictability of
when, why,...
Information And Results
Project Summary

One question that researchers and producers are both asking is: Do high yielding
soybeans need to be fertilized with N? Soybeans require a substantial amount of N,
4 to 5 lbs. per bushel of grain. Biological N fixation (BNF) can only supply from 40 to
70% of what is required with the rest of the N coming from the soil. As growers produce
more soybeans in the 70 and 80 bu/acre range, or the environment becomes more
stressful, both BNF and soil reserves may not be able to supply enough N and could
become limiting, thus the potential for supplemental N response will become more
common.
Responses from applied N are inconsistent and unpredictable. This unpredictability of
when, why, and where an N response will occur needs to be understood and the
variance in BNF is a contributor to that unpredictability. A better understanding of the N
balance for soybean is needed in order to sustainably increase production and seed
quality, maximize profits, increase the efficiency in the use of inputs and reduce the
environmental footprint of current food production systems.
South Dakota has been invited to participate in a national soybean research effort
examining biological N fixation with ten participating universities (Ignacio Ciampitti,
Kansas State University; and Seth Naeve, University of Minnesota; Lead PIs).
Biological Nitrogen Fixation may be the most important economic and environmental
process affecting crop production (and certainly soybean production) in the United
States, yet it is only partially characterized. We know surprisingly little about the
quantities of N fixed by US soybean crops or the fate of that N in the environment. A
better understanding of the soil, soybean management, and environmental factors
affecting BNF along with the quantities of N fixed will contribute to scientific knowledge
leading to greater soybean yields, higher soybean quality, lower environmental impacts, and greater returns to US farmers. We propose to perform two trial locations in South
Dakota for this study, one likely to be responsive to S fertilizers and one likely to be
unresponsive.

Project Objectives

1) Estimate BNF and N budgets in soybean considering N and sulfur (S) fertilization
rates.
2) Build a predictive model for BNF in the United States using environmental data.
3) Extend the results to soybean growers using local and national extension networks.

Project Deliverables

• Prep fertilizers/trial design – April 2021
• Site determination and planting of field trials – May 2021
• Tissue sampling/plot observation – June - August 2021
• Field trial harvest – October 2021
• Dissemination of SD research results – January – March 2022
• Travel to national meeting with study collaborators – February 2022
• Extension and outreach – continually throughout the year

Progress Of Work

Updated February 3, 2022:
See attached report

View uploaded report PDF file

Updated February 3, 2022:
See attached report

View uploaded report PDF file

Final Project Results

Benefit To Soybean Farmers

Data will be analyzed both locally and nationally to determine response trends across
broad scales. Results will be summarized and disseminated to growers via relevant
extension outreach programs (grower meetings, farm shows, SDSU Extension articles,
radio spots, social media, etc) and peer-reviewed publications. Research results will be
used to create national extension fact sheets detailing Best Management Practices for
soybean production. Facts sheets will be national in scope but will address regional
considerations.

The United Soybean Research Retention policy will display final reports with the project once completed but working files will be purged after three years. And financial information after seven years. All pertinent information is in the final report or if you want more information, please contact the project lead at your state soybean organization or principal investigator listed on the project.