At what stage do you apply urea fertilizer?

22 Jul.,2024

 

How to Apply Urea Fertilizer: 14 Steps (with Pictures)

This article was co-authored by Lauren Kurtz . Lauren Kurtz is a Naturalist and Horticultural Specialist. Lauren has worked for Aurora, Colorado managing the Water-Wise Garden at Aurora Municipal Center for the Water Conservation Department. She earned a BA in Environmental and Sustainability Studies from Western Michigan University in . This article has been viewed 366,130 times.

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Article Summary

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To apply urea fertilizer, wait for a cool, windless day when the temperature is between 32° and 60°F (0° and 16°C). On warmer, windy days, the urea will break down too quickly. If you&#;re applying urea before planting, use a fertilizer that contains a urease inhibitor, which will prevent the urea from being used up too quickly before your plants grow. Spread the urea granules across your soil, focusing on the spots around your plants&#; roots or where you plan on burying seeds. Then, water the soil so the top ½ inch (1.3 cm) is wet, which will help incorporate the urea into the soil and prevent the ammonia gas it releases from escaping. Finally, till the urea into the top layer of the soil so it&#;s fully incorporated. For more advice from our Horticulturist co-author, like how to mix urea with other fertilizers, read on.

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Fertilizer urea

If properly applied, urea and fertilizers containing urea are excellent sources of nitrogen for crop production.

Chemical reactions

After application to the soil, urea undergoes chemical changes and ammonium (NH4 +) ions form. Soil moisture determines how rapidly this conversion takes place.

When an urea particle dissolves, the area around it becomes a zone of high pH and ammonia concentration. This zone can be quite toxic for a few hours. The free ammonia that has formed can kill the seed and seedling roots within this zone.

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Fortunately, this toxic zone becomes neutralized in most soils as the ammonia converts to ammonium. Usually it's just a few days before plants can effectively use the nitrogen.

Although urea imparts an alkaline reaction when first applied to the soil, the net effect is to produce an acid reaction.

How and how much to apply

Urea or materials containing urea should, in general, be broadcast and immediately incorporated into the soil.

If applying urea-based fertilizer in a band, separate it from the seed by at least 2 inches of soil. Under no circumstances should urea or urea-based fertilizer be seed-placed with corn.

With small grains, you can generally apply 10 pounds of nitrogen as urea with the grain drill at seeding time, even under dry conditions. Under good moisture conditions, you can apply 20 pounds of nitrogen as urea with the grain drill.

Research findings

Research from North Dakota State University indicates that, under dry conditions, urea can reduce wheat stands more than 50 percent (Table 5). This was for urea applied with a grain drill in a 6-inch spacing, at the rate of more than 20 pounds of nitrogen per acre.

University of Wisconsin research indicates that seed-placed urea with corn, even at low rates of nitrogen, is very toxic to the seed and greatly reduces yields (Table 6). However, when urea was side-placed as a 2-by-2-inch starter, researchers noted little, if any, damage (Table 7).

In Minnesota, good crop production usually requires an application of more than 20 pounds of nitrogen per acre. Farmers can avoid damage from urea by broadcasting most of the urea nitrogen fertilizer ahead of seeding. Data in Table 8 indicate that urea broadcast prior to seeding is equal to or more effective than similar ammonium nitrate treatments.

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