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    Are You Using the Best Fertilizer Products to Achieve Balanced Crop Nutrition?

    Focusing on the fundamentals of fertility now could mean an even better next season.

    When evaluating your fertilizer needs for the upcoming crop year, always consider the agronomic practices and sources needed to meet your goals.

    Higher Yields Equals Increased Nutrient Removal

    We’re coming off a record-setting, high-yielding crop year; in some areas of the country, this marks the third highly productive year in a row. As we focus on soil fertility fundamentals, higher yields equate to higher nutrient removal. Harvesting a crop removes Nitrogen (N), Phosphorus (P),  Potassium (K), and other macro- and Micronutrients from the field which require replenishment to maintain soil productivity for subsequent cropping seasons.

    The December World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) report from the USDA indicated a 15.2-billion- bushel corn crop and a 175.3-bushel- per-acre average for 2016. That equates to an estimated 61 pounds of phosphate (P₂O₅) removed from every acre. The same report indicated a soybean harvest of 4.36 billion bushels, averaging 52.5 bushels/acre, which will remove 63 pounds/acre of potassium oxide (K₂O) from U.S. soils.

    Yield to pounds of phosphate and potassium oxide

    Unfortunately, regardless of how much a crop is worth per bushel, it’s still pulling just as many nutrients from the ground. For some, this will be the third straight year of very difficult decisions related to input costs. Those who have cut back on fertilizer costs may find themselves in a situation that’s very hard to rebound from if they don’t adjust their plans to address the effects of record yield.

    Create a Crop Nutrition Plan

    One way to shift your focus toward fertilizer fundamentals is by creating a crop nutrition plan for your operation. A major component of that includes soil testing. A soil test provides a starting point for your field that becomes the baseline for developing a well-thought- out plan. Best practices for soil tests consist of the following:

    Best practices for soil tests consist of the following:

    • Use a quality soil sample probe rather than a spade.
    • Pull a minimum of 8 to 12 cores to produce a representative sample of each area of interest (e.g., entire field, management zone, etc.). Pulling six to eight cores per area in grid-sampling situations is common.
    • Core samples should always be pulled from a consistent depth. Standard topsoil depths include 6, 8 and 10 inches.
    • Do not angle sample probe when collecting cores. The probe should be placed at a 90° angle to the ground.
    • Mix sample cores in a clean plastic bucket (galvanized can affect results), and place in a properly labeled soil test bag — one for each sample. Write down the crop, a realistic yield goal and other pertinent information as requested by your soil test laboratory.

    When you have updated soil test data, build a plan that gives your crop the best chance to succeed. Mosaic premium products enable the retailer and grower to build a proper crop nutrition plan starting off with a foundational granular fertilizer that ensures the nutrient will be available when the crop needs it. Nutrient sources like MicroEssentials®, Aspire® or K-Mag®, are great tools to use when building your crop nutrition plan. Working with a crop advisor or your retailer can help you explore ways to supplement these products depending on your soil nutrient needs.

    The Importance of Phosphorus and Potassium in Addition to Other Nutrients

    After a soil test is complete, a crop nutrition plan is in place, and a yield goal is established for the crop year, take a deeper dive into the fundamental fertilizer products. It’s important to keep in mind that when crop margins are tight, only investing in N and reducing P and K isn’t the most effective way to achieve your goals and have a successful year. Choosing to reduce your P and K rates or not applying any this year can prevent crops from reaching their most profitable yield level.

    MicroEssentialsAspire and K-Mag deliver essential nutrients that your fields need. In addition to P and K, MicroEssentials supplies the plant with elemental (S⁰) and sulfate sulfur (SO₄²⁻), which creates an available sulfur supply from planting to maturity. Both Aspire and K-Mag deliver an adequate supply of potassium (K₂O) and other secondary macro – and micronutrients including magnesium, sulfur and boron to the soil.

    Heavily manured or fertilized fields rich in P and K may only require supplemental N. However, if you have a field that is very low in P and K, only adding more N without supplying adequate P and K will likely not maximize production and the return on that Nitrogen investment. According to the International Plant Nutrition Institute, this is due to the fact that N will not be taken up by the plant sufficiently without an adequate supply of P and K. MicroEssentials provides the soil with both P and N, and because of its formulation, has been proven to increase P uptake in corn. Growers should be applying P and K to help balance their crop nutrition, and it’s important to note that it’s not all about utilizing just one nutrient to achieve the best results.

    Evaluate Your Crop Nutrition Plan for Every Acre, Every Field and Every Year

    After setting your crop nutrition plan into play, remember to continue to monitor crop growth and development on every acre, every field and every year. Evaluating your field throughout the year is a good way to learn more about your soil’s fertility levels and often will help solve nutrient deficiency concerns. You can monitor the nutrient status of your crop by tissue testing.

    Proactive testing may allow those needs to be addressed in-season, or at the very least, will prove valuable as you review your crop nutrition plan for subsequent growing seasons Using the crop to tell you if it is short on nutrients is a great way to evaluate the effectiveness of your crop nutrition plan. View a crop nutrition plan as a living document which should be reviewed annually based on in-season tissue test, soil test, and yield information to maximize return on fertilizer investments.

    Growers can be confident in the performance of every product from The Mosaic Company. In addition to the more traditional granular P and K nutrient sources, our line of premium fertilizers offer balanced crop nutrition and uniform nutrient distribution demonstrated by years of proven research. Given the current agricultural market conditions, maximizing nutrient recovery and return on fertilizer investment are keys to improving yield, reducing cost of production, and increasing overall profit.

    For more information about Aspire, K-Mag or MicroEssentials, talk to your local retailer or visit AspireBoron.comKMag.com and MicroEssentials.com.