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Technologies for Fertilizers and Management Strategies of N-Fertilization in Coffee Cropping Systems to Reduce Ammonia Losses by Volatilization.

Tainah FreitasLucas BartelegaCésar SantosMateus Portes DutraLeonardo Fernandes SarkisRubens José GuimarãesAnderson William DominghettiPauliana Cristina ZitoTales Jesus FernandesDouglas Guelfi
Published in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The aim of this study was to quantify NH 3 -N losses from conventional, stabilized, slow-release, and controlled-release N fertilizers in a coffee field. The N fertilizers analyzed were prilled urea, prilled urea dissolved in water, ammonium sulfate (AS), ammonium nitrate (AN), urea + Cu + B, urea + adhesive + CaCO 3 , and urea + NBPT (all with three split applications), as well as blended N fertilizer, urea + elastic resin, urea-formaldehyde, and urea + polyurethane (all applied only once). NH 3 -N losses (mean of two crop seasons) were statistically higher for urea + adhesive + CaCO 3 (27.9% of applied N) in comparison with the other treatments. Loss from prilled urea (23.7%) was less than from urea + adhesive + CaCO 3 . Losses from urea + NBPT (14.5%) and urea + Cu + B (13.5%) were similar and lower than those from prilled urea. Urea dissolved in water (4.2%) had even lower losses than those treatments, and the lowest losses were observed for AS (0.6%) and AN (0.5%). For the single application fertilizers, higher losses occurred for urea + elastic resin (5.8%), blended N fertilizer (5.5%), and urea + polyurethane (5.2%); and urea-formaldehyde had a lower loss (0.5%). Except for urea + adhesive + CaCO 3 , all N-fertilizer technologies reduced NH 3 -N losses compared to prilled urea.
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