By Amy Cooper and Mitchell Baum et.al
Optimum nitrogen fertilizer rates for corn can vary by more than 100% from field-to-field and year-to-year. This variability is a product of near limitless interactions among crop genetics, management, and environment factors (weather & soil type). Among them, the amount of soil inorganic nitrogen in the soil is one of the most important (Baum et al., 2024).
Through the Iowa Nitrogen Initiative (INI), which is a partnership between Iowa State University and farmers, we sampled 30 farmers’ fields (N-trials) spread across Iowa in 2024 to quantify soil inorganic N levels (Fig 1). In each field, we measured soil inorganic N from 0-12” and 12-24’’ at the lowest (zero), middle, and highest nitrogen fertilizer rates.
We found that in 96% of the fields, soil inorganic nitrogen levels in the top 12” of soil were less than 20 lbs N/acre (Fig. 2). For reference, this is the lowest level of residual soil nitrogen in the N-FACT decision support system. In conventional outputs of soil tests such as the LSNT, 20 lbs of nitrate-nitrogen in the top 12” is about 6 ppm.