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K-State and Corteva ID corn hybrids can recover more nitrogen from soils for better yields.

August 12, 2022

2 Min Read
Close up of corn stalks
NITROGEN USE: Kansas State University researchers and Corteva scientists have identified and developed corn hybrids that can recover more nitrogen from soils. The hybrids can use the N to increase the plant’s health in late vegetative stages and thus boost grain yields.Jennifer M. Latzke

Farmers are always on the lookout for ways to reduce their nitrogen application costs. Researchers at Kansas State University and at Corteva Agriscience have identified one more method farmers might use in the future.

Recently, Kansas State University and Corteva announced they have found a way to improve the uptake of nitrogen in field-grown maize — likely reducing the environmental impact of applying nitrogen fertilizer to farm fields.

K-State Research and Extension agronomist Ignacio Ciampitti called the discovery “a breakthrough for providing more stable and high yields under challenging environments, [while] reducing dependency on nitrogen fertilization and growing more environmentally sustainable corn.”

Gene identified

Farmers often use nitrogen fertilizer to improve yields in their crops. A challenge, however, is to keep nitrogen in the field where crops can use it for growth, rather than nitrogen escaping to nearby waterways.

Scientists from Corteva Agriscience have developed hybrids in which they are able to regulate when, where and the degree to which the zmm28 gene (known in molecular biology as a transcription factor) is able to express itself.

“The positive effect of increased and extended expression of zmm28 on grain yield has been observed across a wide range of field conditions and a large set of hybrids,” Ciampitti says. “The same event evaluated here has been previously reported to increase yield by as much as 7% under different environments affected by drought and nitrogen deficiency.”

Simply, the hybrids tested recover more nitrogen from soils and use it much better in the plant — especially during the late vegetative stages — to increase yields.

Fieldwork

Javier Fernandez — who conducted much of the fieldwork as a K-State doctoral student — and Ciampitti say the new hybrids seem to be inducing nitrogen storage in the lower leaves of the canopy.

Corteva, established by a merger of Dow and DuPont, funded the research, which has been reported in the scholarly journal Nature Communications Biology.Ciampitti says his lab also received significant support from Kansas Corn.The findings of this project, Ciampitti says, provide an “opportunity to not only increase productivity of corn, but also to enhance the efficiency of nitrogen fertilization,” factors especially important in light of rising costs for fertilizer and other nitrogen sources.

“This is important not only from the standpoint of productivity and the environment, but also in light of fragile food systems currently,” Ciampitti says.

Corteva has not yet released a timeline on when the new hybrids will be available to farmers.

Source: Kansas State Research and Extension is solely responsible for the information provided and is wholly owned by the source. Informa Business Media and all its subsidiaries are not responsible for any of the content contained in this information asset.

 

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