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TOWARDS INNOVATIVE MANAGEMENT OF NITROGEN FERTILISER FOR A SUSTAINABLE SUGAR INDUSTRY
By P.J. THORBURN, A.J. WEBSTER, I.M. BIGGS, J.S. BIGGS, S.E. PARK and M.F. SPILLMAN
THE MANAGEMENT of nitrogen (N) fertiliser is important to the Australian sugar
industry, as it has significant production and environmental consequences that
need to be balanced in N management recommendations. This paper reports
results from 12 on-farm experiments established from Mossman to Broadwater
in 2003 or 2004 to examine the concept of replacing N lost from a field through
harvested cane and environmental processes as a way of determining N fertiliser
needs. This N replacement concept was compared with the farmers' current N
management and, at seven sites, a lower rate of N fertiliser. In general, yields
were similar and profitability (assessed by partial gross margins) higher in the N
replacement than the current N management. At only one site in one year was
yield with the farmers' N management significantly higher than with N
replacement. CCS was little affected by N treatment. Trends in soil mineral N
through time at the sites differed more between sites than between treatments,
and suggested that yields in the N replacement treatments were not being
sustained by 'mining' N from the soil. Yields with low N were little different
from the other treatments, although there was some evidence of depletion of soil
N at two sites with this treatment. The surplus of N, i.e. the difference between
N applied and that lost through crop harvest (and trash burning at some sites),
was estimated to be 85% lower in the N replacement treatment than with
farmers' current N management, indicating a potentially much reduced
environmental impact of this management system. The results to date provide
the first field evidence that the N replacement concept may be an economically
and environmentally sustainable innovation in N management for sugarcane
production.