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AREI Chapter 4.4: Nutrient Management

Contents
 

Stan Daberkow and Wen Huang

Abstract—Since the early 1990s, U.S. commercial fertilizer use, application rates, and management practices have tended to change modestly from year to year, while fertilizer prices have exhibited more variability.

Introduction

The major plant nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium) are critical for maintaining crop yields but have also been associated with the impairment of numerous streams, lakes, and aquifers. For most U.S. crops and in most regions, commercial fertilizer is the major source of plant nutrients, although organic sources—such as legumes, crop residue, and animal wastes—can also provide nutrients required for plant growth. Commercial fertilizer is a major agricultural input; farmers typically spend over $10 billion annually on commercial fertilizer, although fertilizer use and prices vary from year to year. Historically, crop producers have used large amounts of commercial fertilizer and organic nutrients, but the concern over run off and leaching has prompted the promotion of nutrient management practices that minimize nutrient loss.

The share of acres receiving fertilizer, application rates for primary nutrients (nitrogen, phosphate, and potash), and nutrient management practices on major field crops (corn, soybeans, wheat, and cotton) remained fairly stable over the 1990s. However, fertilizer prices, especially for nitrogen, have been volatile and have risen rapidly in recent years. Despite increased fertilizer prices and growing concern about environmental risks from fertilizer use, the use of nutrient management practices on major crops has changed little since the early 1990s.

Fertilizer Use Nationally and by Region

U.S. commercial fertilizer use peaked in 1981 at over 23 million nutrient tons, but has exceeded 22 million tons seldom since then (fig. 4.4.1). The decline in (principal crop) planted acreage since 1998 likely accounts for part of the falloff in fertilizer since then. The mix of crops planted each year also influences aggregate fertilizer use. Corn and wheat acreage, which consumes the most fertilizer among all crops, has dropped since 1998, and fertilizer use on soybeans has only partially offset the falloff.

For more information, contact: Stan Daberkow and Wen Huang

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Updated date: July 21, 2006