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Site-specific nutrient
management (SSNM) enables rice farmers to optimally supply their crop with
essential nutrients. With SSNM, plant-essential nutrients are supplied as and
when required to ensure the ‘feeding’ of the rice crop to optimally meet its
nutrient needs.
The SSNM
approach involves three steps:

Rice yields are
location and season specific — depending upon climate, rice
cultivar, and crop management. The yield target for a given location
and season is the estimated grain yield attainable with farmers’
crop management when N, P, and K constraints are overcome.
The amount of nutrients taken up by a rice crop is directly related
to yield. The yield target therefore indicates the total amount of
nutrients that must be taken up by the crop.
Step 2: Effectively use existing nutrients
The SSNM approach promotes the optimal use of existing
(indigenous) nutrients coming from the soil, organic amendments,
crop residue, manure, and irrigation water. The uptake of a nutrient
from indigenous sources can be estimated from the
nutrient-limited yield, which is
the grain yield for a crop not fertilized with the nutrient of
interest but fertilized with other nutrients to ensure they do not
limit yield.
Step 3: Apply fertilizer to fill the deficit
between crop needs and indigenous supply
Fertilizer N, P, and K are applied to supplement the
nutrients from indigenous sources and achieve the yield target. The
quantity of required fertilizer is determined by the deficit between
the crop’s total needs for nutrients — as determined by the yield
target — and the supply of these nutrients from indigenous sources —
as determined by the nutrient-limited yield.
The required fertilizer N is distributed in several
applications during the crop growing season to best feed the crop’s
need for supplemental N. Fertilizer P and K are applied in
sufficient amounts to overcome deficiencies and maintain soil
fertility.
In the SSNM approach, fertilizers are applied using the
following principles to achieve high yield and high efficiency of
plant use:
1.
Apply only a moderate amount of fertilizer N to young rice within
the 14 days after transplanting (DAT) or 21 days after sowing (DAS),
when the need of the crop for supplemental N is small.
2.
Apply fertilizer N after 14 DAT or 21 DAS based on the crop’s need
for supplemental N, as determined by leaf N status. The
leaf color chart
(LCC) is a tool that could be used for assessing leaf N status and
the crop’s need for N.
3.
Apply all fertilizer P near transplanting or sowing.
Apply
fertilizer K twice — 50% near transplanting or sowing and 50% at
early panicle initiation. When fertilizer K rates are relatively low
(for example, ≤30 kg K2O ha−1), all fertilizer
K can be applied near transplanting or sowing.
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