In this 2-year study, there was no significant benefit of a urease inhibitor, with or without a nitrification inhibitor, on canola and wheat N removal, N uptake, nitrogen use efficiency or yield. These inhibitors also did not significantly reduce the amount of leached nitrate in the soil.
Enhanced efficiency fertilizers are used to reduce nitrogen (N) losses from ammonia volatilization, nitrate leaching, nitrous oxide emission, and dinitrogen gas emission.
Urease inhibitors (N-(n-butyl) thiophosphoric triamide, NBPT) have been used to prevent volatilization losses of N. Nitrification inhibitors (NIs) inhibit the activities of ammonia-oxidizing organisms that convert ammonium to nitrite, to reduce N loss due to nitrate leaching and nitrous oxide emissions. NIs include dicyandiamide (DCD), 2-chloro-6 (trichloromethyl) pyridine (commonly known as nitrapyrin, NPN), 3,4-dimethyl pyrazole phosphate (DMPP), and 2-amino-4-chloro-6-methyl pyrimidine (AM).
A 2-year research study was conducted to determine which of the four common nitrification inhibitors (DCD, NPN, DMPP, and AM), when combined with NBPT, maximizes yield, N removal, and N uptake, as well as reduces nitrate leaching from surface-applied urea fertilizer.