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Publication Bedarfsgerechte Stickstoffernährung von Hopfen (Humulus lupulus L.) durch Düngesysteme mit Fertigation(2021) Stampfl, Johannes; Ebertseder, ThomasIn terms of quantity, nitrogen is the most important and most yield limiting plant nutrient in hops (Humulus lupulus L.), whereby excess nitrogen not taken up by the hop plant is subject to various loss processes. Despite that, little is known about the exact effects of an N supply varying in rate and timing for the hop varieties and cultivation systems currently used in the Hallertau, the worlds most important hop-growing region. In the Hallertau, the required amount of nitrogen is largely supplied by surface spreading of granulated N fertilizers, whereas in semi-arid growing regions, high proportions are applied via irrigation water (fertigation). The aim of this thesis was to examine nitrogen fertilization systems with fertigation under the conditions in the Hallertau region with regard to a nitrogen nutrition that is based on the hop plant’s needs. Therefore, four research questions with different sub-aspects have been formulated, as explained below. From 2017 to 2019 the experimental research and the acquisition of empirical data has been conducted in various field trials consisting of three trial series examining the most important hop varieties at different locations. Apart from a variation in rate and timing of N fertilization, different fertilizer application forms (surface application of granulated fertilizer and above- or below-ground fertigation) have also been examined. In addition to the determination of yield, quality and N-uptake at the time of harvest, further analysis methods such as the 15N-Tracer-Technique, chlorophyll value measurements (SPAD-Meter) or passive reflection measurements were used in individual field trials to depict the N-uptake and N-distribution in different parts of the plant. a) Which effects have different nitrogen treatments varied in rate and timing? These studies found that the hop plant absorbs more than two thirds of the total amount of nitrogen over a period of 7 to 8 weeks between early June and end of July - during formation of main biomass. Despite the fact that only a low amount of nitrogen is accumulated in the plant prior to this stage, the varieties Perle and Tradition showed that a nitrogen deficit in early growth stages until end of May already leads to a decrease of yield potential. This is due to a change in the variety-characteristic formation of lateral shoots (side arms) - the later the application of nitrogen, the greater the formation of side arms was reduced, starting from the bottom to higher plant sections. Consequently, a nitrogen fertilization solely based on the hop plant’s N uptake curve cannot be recommended, neither regarding yield formation nor nitrogen utilization. Instead, an early application of the first nitrogen treatment in April is of vital importance for early maturing varieties such as Perle and Tradition. Late maturing varieties like Herkules show a higher potential of compensation due to prolonged growth phases which enables a higher adaption of N-Fertilization to the plant’s N uptake curve. The ideal amount of nitrogen fertilization with regard to yield optimization has been determined by the growth pattern - depending on variety, weather conditions and location - and therefore by the N uptake, the supply of mineral nitrogen in the soil as well as the location-specific N mineralization potential. A reduction of the nitrogen fertilization to a level significantly below the plant’s N uptake not necessarily led to a limitation of biomass and yield formation in the same year, however, it resulted in an accelerated ripening and a negative impact on external cone quality. Furthermore, it showed that the storage of nitrogen in specific storage roots declines if N levels are significantly reduced, leading to lower vitality as well as limited plant development and yield formation in the following year. With regard to the hop plant’s perennial properties as well as the goal to achieve a demand-oriented nitrogen nutrition of the hop plant it is also necessary to supply the storage roots with enough nitrogen. With respect to valuable contents of alpha acid it has been found that high N supply levels during the stage of alpha acid synthesis (starting from early August) can result in a reduction of alpha acid concentration in the variety Herkules. This decrease can be caused by late and excessive N fertilization as well as by high mineral N contents in the soil. However, this effect has not been observed in the aroma varieties Perle and Tradition. b) Is it possible to determine the current nitrogen nutritional status through non-invasive methods? The measurement of the chlorophyll value with a SPAD-Meter on the lower leaves of the main shoot generally reflected the N content and N supply status of the hop plant. However, short-term changes in the N nutritional status could not be recorded with sufficient accuracy at this measuring point, especially not during the stage of main biomass formation, since increased proportions of the applied nitrogen were transported to higher plant sections, as was shown by the use of 15N. Regarding the determination of threshold values a classification of the plant development into before, during and after main biomass formation independent of the measuring point, is considered appropriate, since the chlorophyll value correlates with the plant’s development stage. Vegetation indices, calculated on the basis of reflectance spectra, represent not only the N content but also the actual N uptake of the crop, which is why passive reflectance measurement methods have a higher informative value with regard to the current N supply status of the plant compared to chlorophyll value measurements. Therefore, this technology could be used to achieve a site-specific optimization of rate and timing of N fertilization and thus a more demand-oriented nitrogen nutrition of the hop plant in the future. c) What are the effects of surface and subsurface drip irrigation? In the period from 2017 to 2019, additional irrigation of the aroma variety Perle on sandy soil led to a stabilization of the agronomic parameters cone yield and alpha acid content every year. In addition, irrigation also achieved an improvement of nitrogen utilization. Compared to subsurface systems, surface drip irrigation achieved a higher efficiency if the horizontal water distribution was limited by hydraulic soil properties. It was shown that this is due to the fact that the majority of the hop plant’s fine root system is located in the hill formed along the hop rows and the soil layers beneath it. d) What are the effects of a nitrogen nutrition via irrigation water? A system comparison was made between N fertilization systems with fertigation and a solely granulated N application. The use of fertigation resulted not only in an improvement of cone yield and alpha acid content, but also in an increase of the plants nitrogen uptake and a reduction of Nmin content in the soil, which is also associated with a reduction of the risk of nitrate leaching into the groundwater. Fertilization systems with fertigation achieved a higher nitrogen utilization especially at low N-fertilization rates. If two thirds of the total amount of nitrogen were applied via irrigation water, the concentration over a 6-week period proved to have a positive impact on all analyzed varieties, especially under conditions of a limited N supply, since a higher proportion of N has been applied during main biomass formation and the stage of lateral shoot growth. For an efficient N-fertilization with fertigation the application should take place between mid-June and late July while no significant amounts of nitrogen should be applied after early August. For early maturing varieties such as Perle and Tradition, there is a risk of a late N application as it is hardly possible to lay out the drip tubes before the 25th week of the year. Therefore, in early maturing varieties, a higher proportion of N should be applied in earlier growth stages while the amount of N applied via fertigation should be less than two-thirds of the total amount of N fertilizer. A substantial advantage of fertilization systems with fertigation is that nitrogen applied via the irrigation water is immediately absorbed by the plants, which allows an effective short-term intervention in the plant’s nitrogen nutrition. On the basis of a reliable recording of the current N supply status with sensors during the main growth stage, fertigation could be used to adjust the N fertilization in order to achieve a site-specific and demand-oriented nitrogen nutrition of the hop plant.Publication Bio-effectors for improved growth, nutrient acquisition and disease resistance of crops(2017) Weinmann, Markus; Neumann, GünterRecent scientific approaches to sustain agricultural production in face of a growing world food demand, limited natural resources, and ecological concerns have been focusing on biological processes to support soil fertility and healthy plant growth. In this context, the use of “bio-effectors”, comprising living (micro-) organisms and active natural compounds, has been receiving increasing attention. In contrast to conventional fertilizers and pesticides, the effectiveness of “bio-effectors” is essentially not based on the substantial direct input of mineral plant nutrients, neither in inorganic nor organic forms, nor of a-priori toxic compounds. Their direct or indirect effects on plant performance are rather based on the functional implementation or activation of biological mechanisms, in particular those interfering with soil-plant-microbe interactions. The general objective of the present research work was to improve the empirical and conceptual understanding concerning the utilization of bio-effectors in agricultural practice, following the principles of plant growth stimulation, bio-fertilization and bio-control. One main aspect of investigation was the application of bio-effectors to improve the efficiency of phosphorus (P) acquisition by the plant. Promising bio-preparations based on microbial inoculants (e.g. Bacillus, Pseudomonas, Trichoderma species) as well as natural compounds (e.g. algae extracts, humic acids) were tested in screening assays, greenhouse, and field experiments to characterize their potential effectiveness under varying environmental conditions. The most significant effects on plants appeared under severely low phosphate availability, but even under controlled conditions, bio-effectors required a narrow range of conductive environmental settings to reveal their potential effectiveness. Another focus of research was the application of bio-effectors to control soil borne pathogens, which typically appear in unsound crop rotations. Emphasis was set on take-all disease in wheat induced by the fungus Gaeumannomyces graminis. While the effectiveness of oat precrops to control take-all in subsequent wheat has been attributed to microbial changes and enhanced manganese (Mn) availability in soils, the take-all fungus is known to decrease the availability of Mn by oxidation. Against this background, the effectiveness of oat precrops and alternative crop management strategies to improve the Mn status and suppress the severity of take-all in wheat was investigated under controlled and field conditions. In conclusion, none of the tested supplemental treatments, such the application of microbial bio-effectors, stabilized ammonium or manganese fertilizers, could fully substitute for the multiple effectiveness of oat precrops, which was further confirmed by the results of a field experiment. Finally, some general conclusions and perspectives are summarized. Selected bio-effectors showed a strong capacity to improve the nutrient acquisition and healthy growth of crop plants under controlled conditions, but not in field experiments. However, even under controlled conditions the strongest effects occurred when plants were exposed to abiotic or biotic stresses, such as severely limited P availability or pathogen infestation of the soil substrate, still restricting plant growth to unproductive levels. Facing this situation, there is no perspective to improve the field efficiency of promising bio-effectors applications as a stand-alone approach. The only chance to develop viable alternatives to the conventional use of fertilizers or pesticides, for an ecological intensification of agriculture that maintains high yield levels, seems to be a reasonable integration of bio-effectors into the whole crop management of sound agricultural practice.Publication Bio-effectors for improved growth, nutrient acquisition and disease resistance of crops.- 2nd unrevised edition(2019) Weinmann, Markus; Madora GmbH, Luckestr.1, D-79539 Lörrach; Raupp, Manfred G.Recent scientific approaches to sustain agricultural production in face of a growing world food demand, limited natural resources, and ecological concerns have been focusing on biological processes to support soil fertility and healthy plant growth. In this context, the use of “bio-effectors”, comprising living (micro-) organisms and active natural compounds, has been receiving increasing attention. In contrast to conventional fertilizers and pesticides, the effectiveness of “bio-effectors” is essentially not based on the substantial direct input of mineral plant nutrients, neither in inorganic nor organic forms, nor of a-priori toxic compounds. Their direct or indirect effects on plant performance are rather based on the functional implementation or activation of biological mechanisms, in particular those interfering with soil-plant-microbe interactions. The general objective of the present research work was to improve the empirical and conceptual understanding concerning the utilization of bio-effectors in agricultural practice, following the principles of plant growth stimulation, bio-fertilization and bio-control. One main aspect of investigation was the application of bio-effectors to improve the efficiency of phosphorus (P) acquisition by the plant. Promising bio-preparations based on microbial inoculants (e.g. Bacillus, Pseudomonas, Trichoderma species) as well as natural compounds (e.g. algae extracts, humic acids) were tested in screening assays, greenhouse, and field experiments to characterize their potential effectiveness under varying environmental conditions. The most significant effects on plants appeared under severely low phosphate availability, but even under controlled conditions, bio-effectors required a narrow range of conductive environmental settings to reveal their potential effectiveness. Another focus of research was the application of bio-effectors to control soil borne pathogens, which typically appear in unsound crop rotations. Emphasis was set on take-all disease in wheat induced by the fungus Gaeumannomyces graminis. While the effectiveness of oat precrops to control take-all in subsequent wheat has been attributed to microbial changes and enhanced manganese (Mn) availability in soils, the take-all fungus is known to decrease the availability of Mn by oxidation. Against this background, the effectiveness of oat precrops and alternative crop management strategies to improve the Mn status and suppress the severity of take-all in wheat was investigated under controlled and field conditions. In conclusion, none of the tested supplemental treatments, such the application of microbial bio-effectors, stabilized ammonium or manganese fertilizers, could fully substitute for the multiple effectiveness of oat precrops, which was further confirmed by the results of a field experiment. Finally, some general conclusions and perspectives are summarized. Selected bio-effectors showed a strong capacity to improve the nutrient acquisition and healthy growth of crop plants under controlled conditions, but not in field experiments. However, even under controlled conditions the strongest effects occurred when plants were exposed to abiotic or biotic stresses, such as severely limited P availability or pathogen infestation of the soil substrate, still restricting plant growth to unproductive levels. Facing this situation, there is no perspective to improve the field efficiency of promising bio-effectors applications as a stand-alone approach. The only chance to develop viable alternatives to the conventional use of fertilizers or pesticides, for an ecological intensification of agriculture that maintains high yield levels, seems to be a reasonable integration of bio-effectors into the whole crop management of sound agricultural practice.Publication Effects of nitrification inhibitors and application technique on trace gas fluxes from a maize field after cattle slurry fertilization(2019) Herr, Christina; Müller, TorstenIn a time of climate change and against the background of intensive animal husbandry and biogas production in Germany, strategies for mitigation of greenhouse gas (GHG) release and Nitrogen (N) losses from silage maize production become increasingly important, especially for organic fertilizers. Consequently, the main objective of this study was to determine the height of GHG release from silage maize production on a medium textured soil which is typical for this region in Southwest Germany and to evaluate useful fertilization opportunities to mitigate carbon dioxide (CO2) footprint per yield unit. To identify management factors improving GHG budget from silage maize, annual nitrous oxide (N2O) and methane (CH4) measurements were carried out during maize growth and subsequent black fallow at least weekly. Investigations were conducted over two years on two adjacent fields (one for each study year). Amounts of ammonia (NH3) volatilizations after fertilization and nitrate (NO3-) leaching losses were also included in GHG balances. In dependence on available data, determined or estimated values were used. Additionally, yield and N removal from maize plants were quantified. The basic treatments of this study which investigated impact of fertilizer form and application techniques, were an unfertilized control (CON), a mineral fertilization (MIN), a banded cattle slurry application by trailing hose and subsequent incorporation (INC) and a cattle slurry injection (INJ). As confirmed repeatedly, in contrast to broadcast slurry incorporation, slurry injection efficiently reduced the risk of NH3 losses by direct slurry placement into the soil, but simultaneously provoked N2O formation more strongly, probably due to the anaerobic conditions in the injection slot favoring denitrification. For reducing N2O release from slurry injection, the applicability of six single or combined nitrification inhibitors (NIs) concerning potential GHG reduction were investigated. This N2O reduction should be reached through the desynchronized availability of carbon (C) and NO3-, derived from nitrified slurry ammonium (NH4+). Thus, in the period after slurry application, N2O losses from denitrification as well as from nitrification should be reduced through NIs. For final evaluation, collection of measured and estimated data (including direct and indirect N2O losses (NH3, NO3-), CH4 budget, pre-chain emissions from mineral fertilizer and fuel consumption) were converted into CO2 equivalents and summarized as area- or yield-related GHG balances. Except for one of the INJ treatments with NI (exclusively investigated in the first year) and one INC treatment with NI (exclusively investigated in the second year), all remaining treatments were tested in both experimental years. The height of NH3 emissions from INC treatment (12-23 % of applied NH4+-N) was more weather-dependent than those from INJ treatment (12-15 % of applied NH4+-N). In mean over both years, cumulative N2O emission from INJ treatment (13.8 kg N2O-N ha-1 yr-1), was significantly higher than from CON, MIN, and INC which recorded 2.8, 4.7, and 4.4 kg N2O-N ha-1 yr-1. NIs decreased the fertilization-induced N2O emissions from injection by 36 % (mean over all NIs and years) by an order of magnitude comparable to slurry incorporation. The NIs investigated tended to be categorized in inhibitors with prior and delayed inhibitory maximum. Whether low persistence, or poor biological degradability was an advantage, depended on environmental conditions. A combination of two NIs, one with putative prior and one with delayed release behavior reached the highest N2O reduction. In the additional INC treatment, this NI combination tended to reduce annual N2O release by 20 % in comparison to incorporation without inhibitor. Beside the potential of reducing fertilization-induced N2O emissions, NIs might also help to improve CH4 budgets in silage maize production. In general, CON, MIN and INC were net CH4 sinks in both years with mean uptakes of 460, 127, and 793 g CH4-C ha-1 yr-1, respectively. Conversely, slurry injection resulted in net CH4 emissions of 3144 g CH4-C ha-1 yr-1 (mean over both years). However, NIs tended to reduce CH4 emissions from injection by around 48 % and increased CH4 consumption from slurry incorporation by 20 %. Across all treatments and years, direct N2O emissions were the major contributor to total GHG balance. Yield-related GHG budgets from both years were lowest for CON, followed by INC or MIN treatment and significantly highest for sole slurry injection. NIs decreased fertilization-induced GHG release from injection in mean over both years by order of magnitude comparable with slurry incorporation. Consequently, alongside slurry incorporation and broadcast mineral fertilization, slurry injection combined with recommended NIs was evaluated as an equally appropriate fertilization strategy in terms of the atmospheric burden for livestock farmers.Publication Evaluation and improvement of N fertilization strategies in the wheat/maize double-cropping system of the North China Plain(2015) Hartmann, Tobias Edward; Müller, TorstenThe North China Plain (NCP) is the main production area of cereal crops in China. The intensification of agricultural systems and the increased use of chemical N fertilizers are contributing to environmental pollution. One of the objectives of this thesis was to apply an Nmin based approach for the calculation of N application rates to a previously over-fertilized farmers field of the NCP and to evaluate the potential of reducing N inputs while maintaining the grain yield of a summer-maize/winter-wheat double-cropping system; and to evaluate fertilizer strategies, aiming to reduce N inputs and loss. Using an Nmin based approach for the calculation of fertilizer application rates, a reduction of fertilizer input by up to 50% compared to farmers practice (550 kg N ha-1 a-1) is possible without negatively affecting the grain yield of a wheat / maize double cropping system. The extreme re-supply of N during the summer-vegetation periods of maize in the first two experimental seasons resulted in high yields of the control treatment (CK: 2009: 5.7 and 2010: 5.9 Mg ha-1), which did not significantly differ from the fertilized treatments. This resulted in a reduced recovery efficiency of N (REN: 0.09 kg kg-1 – 0.30 kg kg-1). According to the results of this field experiment there was no agronomic justification for the application of fertilizer N. The grain yield of maize of the control treatment finally decreased in the third vegetation period of summer-maize. While maintaining the yield level, the optimized application of N increased REN (0.37 – 0.58 kg kg-1) significantly compared to farmers practice (0.21 kg kg-1) in this final vegetation period of maize. Wheat, in contrast to maize, is dependent on the application of fertilizer N for yield formation. In both vegetation periods of wheat, REN of the reduced treatments (0.34 – 1.0 kg kg-1) was significantly higher compared to FP (0.26 and 0.27 kg kg-1). The highest cumulated (5 vegetation periods) agronomic efficiency of N, as well as cumulated grain yield of the wheat/maize double-cropping system was observed when ammoniumsulphate-nitrate was applied in combination with the nitrification inhibitor 3,4-dimethylpyrazolephosphate (ASNDMPP: AEN: 19 kg kg-1, yield: 35 Mg ha-1) and according to crop N demand and residual soil mineral N. The highest REN was observed when urea ammonium nitrate was applied in a shallow, banded depot (UANDEP: 40 kg kg-1). The results of this field experiment further show that the N surplus (fertilized N - grain N) as well as the N balance (N Input - N output) after harvest are significantly lower when an optimized approach to fertilizer application is followed. The over-application of N for an optimized application of urea or ASNDMPP (Surplus: -25kg to 98 kg N ha-1; Balance: -36 to 102 kg N ha-1) was significantly reduced compared to current farmers practice (Surplus: 156kg to 187 kg N ha-1; Balance: 56 to 262 kg N ha-1). This leads to lower residual N in the soil horizon from 0 - 90 cm in the reduced treatments (113 kg N ha-1 at end of experiment) compared to FP (293 kg N ha-1). The results of this experiment indicate that N contained in the residues of maize is available only to the subsequent summer-crop and may sufficiently supply N for the yield formation of maize. Should the over-application of N be effectively reduced in the cropping systems of the NCP it is therefore necessary to take the N mineralization potential of soils into account. Based on the results of this field experiment and others, a crop-soil interface model (HERMES) was calibrated and validated to the conditions of the NCP. Finally, this research observed the effect of wheat straw and the urease inhibitor (UI) N-(n-buthyl) thiophosphoric triamide (nBPT) on the turnover of urea, as well as the loss of ammonia and nitrous oxide from an alkaline soil of the NCP. UI inhibit or reduce the appearance of ammonia after the application of urea and almost completely prevent the loss of N as ammonia (urea: 12 – 14% loss). nBPT effectively reduces the rate of urea hydrolysis but does not down-regulate the process enough to completely inhibit nitrification, thereby maintaining the availability of N from urea for plants. Further, the addition of wheat straw prolongs the appearance of ammonium after the application of urea while the appearance of nitrate is reduced. Wheat straw may therefore either act as a stimulant of hydrolysis or as an inhibitor of nitrification. The addition of urea increases soil respiration and the emission of N2O drastically, possibly acting as a C and N source for microbial organisms and causing a priming effect on microbial activity in soils. This effect was increased further when wheat straw as well as urea were added to soil. nBPT, in contrast, prevents a significant increase in CO2-respiration and N2O-emission. The urease inhibitor may therefore generally restrict microbial activity or shift nitrification/denitrification processes towards the emission of N2.Publication Fertilizer placement and the potential for its combination with bio-effectors to improve crop nutrient acquisition and yield(2016) Nkebiwe, Peteh Mehdi; Müller, TorstenEven when total nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) concentrations in most agricultural soils are high, the concentrations of plant-available N and P fractions are often inadequate for acceptable yield. In comparison to conventional fertilizer application by homogenous broadcast over the soil surface (with or without subsequent incorporation), fertilizer placement in defined soil areas/volumes close to seeds or crop roots is a more effective application method to enhance the plant-availability of applied fertilizers. Nevertheless, considerable root growth in subsurface nutrient patches or around concentrated fertilizer-depots (and/or improved nutrient influx rates in roots) is a prerequisite for improved uptake of placed nutrients. Furthermore, zones with intense rooting around placed fertilizer depots (“rhizosphere hotspots”) with high concentrations of organic nutrients released as root exudates may be favorable for the survival and establishment of inoculated plant-growth-promoting microorganisms (PGPMs), which mobilize nutrients in soil to favor plant growth. In the last three decades, several published field studies comparing fertilizer placement to fertilizer broadcast arrived at different and often conflicting results regarding their effects on yield and nutrient status of various crops. For this reason, the first task was to conduct a Meta-analysis on data in published peer-reviewed field studies on fertilizer placement that met a set of pre-defined criteria for inclusion. We investigated the relative effect of fertilizer placement for specific fertilizer formulations (e.g. NH4+ and CO(NH2)2 without or in combination with soluble P (HPO42-; H2PO4-); soluble K; solid or liquid manure) in a precise restricted area on surface or subsurface soil in comparison to fertilizer broadcast on yield, nutrient concentration and content in above-ground plant parts. We utilized data from a total of 40 field studies published between 1982 and 2015 (85% of studies published from 2000) that met our criteria. We used the method of “baseline contrasts” to compare different fertilizer placement treatments to fertilizer broadcast as a common control or baseline treatment. Results showed that overall, fertilizer placement led to +3.7% higher yields, +3.7% higher concentrations of nutrients in above-ground plant parts and +11.9% higher contents of nutrients also in above-ground plant parts than fertilizer broadcast application. Placement depth had a strong effect of the outcome of fertilizer placement because relative placement effects increased with increasing fertilizer placement depth. Composition of fertilizer formulations was also an important factor. High yields of fertilizer placement relative to fertilizer broadcast application were obtained for CO(NH2)2 in combination with soluble P (HPO42-; H2PO4-) (+27%) or NH4+ in combination with HPO42-; H2PO4- (+15%) (Nkebiwe et al., 2016 a: Field Crops Research 196: 389–401). The next aim was to investigate the effect of fertilizer placement in subsurface soil in combination with application of bio-effectors (BEs) (PGPMs and natural active substances such as humic acids and seaweed extracts) on root growth of crop plants, establishment of inoculated PGPM in the rhizosphere, grain and biomass production as well as plant nutrient status for maize (Zea mays L) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L) cultures. Through various pot and rhizobox experiments, we observed that placement of a subsurface concentrated NH4+-fertilizer depot stabilized with the nitrification inhibitor DMPP (3,4-di-methylpyrazolphosphate) induced dense rooting around the depot contributing to more efficient exploitation of the depot. For this, it was crucial the N persisted in the depot mainly as poorly mobile NH4+, in order to induce localized depot-zone root-growth as well as favorable chemical and biological changes in the rhizosphere to improve N and P uptake by crop plants. Through in vitro culture experiments on solid and liquid media, we could show that via acidification of the growth media, several selected microbial BEs were capable to solubilize sparingly soluble inorganic phosphates and also that these BEs showed considerable tolerance to high concentrations of NH4+ und DMPP. The latter indicated a potential for the BEs to colonize plant roots in NH4+-rich well rooted soil zones around a subsurface NH4+-fertilizer depot (Nkebiwe et al., 2016 c: Manuscript submitted). Through further pot experiments and four others experiments as Bachelor and Master theses conduction under my supervision, we observed that certain BEs that readily solubilized tri-calcium phosphates in vitro were able to mobilize rock phosphate (RP) applied in soil-based substrates when N was supplied as stabilized NH4++DMPP, thereby contributing to enhanced P uptake and growth of maize and wheat plants. The bacterial BE Pseudomonas sp. DSMZ 13134 and BE consortia products containing bacteria and fungi such as CombiFectorA were good candidates. BE-induced RP-solubilzation occurred mainly in substrates with low CaCO3 contents indicating low P sorption capacity for neutral and moderately alkaline soils. With CombiFectorA, maize P-acquisition from sewage sludge ash could be enhanced, thus increasing the efficiency of a sparingly soluble fertilizer based of recycled wastes. Possible explanations for the beneficial effects of best performing BEs to improve plant growth were enhanced solubility of sparingly soluble P fertilizers via acidification of the rhizosphere and release of nutrient-chelating substances as well as improvement of root growth for better spatial interception of nutrients (Nkebiwe et al., 2016 d: Manuscript in preparation). Alongside, more greenhouse and two field experiments (grain maize 2014 and maize silage 2015) were designed, planned, conducted and evaluated. A peer-reviewed paper from this work has already been published (Nkebiwe et al., 2016 b: Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture 3:15). In the greenhouse and experiments, placement of a concentrated stabilized NH4+-fertilizer depot led to improved root and shoot growth, and increased shoot N and P contents. Through intense root growth of maize around the NH4+-depot, increased root-colonization by Pseudomonas sp. DSMZ 13134 close to seeds could be observed. In the field, many weeks after subsurface placement of the concentrated stabilized NH4+-depot, it could be shown that N considerably persisted in the depot-zone as NH4+, which strongly induced depot-zone root growth. Placement of the NH4+-depot led to +7.4 % increase in grain yield of maize (2014) and +5.8% increase in maize silage yield (2015) in comparison to fertilizer broadcast. Placement of Pseudomonas sp. DSMZ 13134 inoculum in the sowing row let to +7.1% increase in yield of maize silage (2015) in comparison to the non-inoculated control. In total, these results showed that precise placement of specific fertilizer formulations in combination with the application of selected PGPMs can lead to improved plant growth, improved N and P uptake with a potential to save resources.Publication Nutritional and climatic effects on berry shrivel of grapevines in Southern Germany(2012) Bachteler, Kristina; Wünsche, Jens NorbertBerry shrivel (BS) is one of the economically most important physiological disorders in grapevine, but it is also one of the least studied ones. At the beginning of the ripening process, berries stop accumulating sugars and lose their turgescence. The must weight remains low, the berries taste sour and bitter. During the last ten years, several studies were conducted to narrow eliciting factors. As a result, an unbalanced ratio of K and Mg in the soil was considered likely to induce BS. To verify this hypothesis, two fertilization trials with two different varieties each, one via the soil and one foliar fertilization trial, were initiated. Within two years, no effect on the incidence of BS was evident. In the foliar fertilization trials, Mg, K and Ca fertilizers were tested with their effect on BS. For the first year, no significant differences could be observed. In the second year, more berries were affected by BS in the plots treated with Ca fertilizer. The plots with Mg fertilizer showed significantly less berries affected by BS than the untreated control in one variety. Extensive analysis of concentrations of Ca, Mg and K in berries illustrate that berries affected by BS show significantly higher concentrations of Ca compared to healthy berries. The loss of quality of wines made of berries affected by BS was demonstrated by must and wine analysis as well as by a consumer preference analysis. Phenolic compounds (in particular resveratrol) that are often used as indicators of abiotic stress were analysed as well. It was supposed that BS is caused or increased by abiotic stress so that the concentration of resveratrol in berries affected by BS is increased as well. However, in all varieties analysed, the concentration of resveratrol was higher in healthy berries than in affected ones. A direct connection between weather condition at bloom and especially at ripening was examined. Observations at monitoring sites and reports from other countries seem to show that cool and wet weather at these phenological stages might increase the risk of BS. It was only possible to statistically prove a connection between the precipitation at bloom and the incidence of BS.Publication Reducing irrigation water supply to accomplish the goal of designing sustainable cropping systems in the North China plain(2007) Binder, Jochen; Claupein, WilhelmAn International Research Training Group (IRTG) of the University of Hohenheim and the China Agricultural University, entitled ?Modeling Material Flows and Production Systems for Sustainable Resource Use in the North China Plain? was launched in 2004. The major hypothesis was ?that adjustments in cropping systems and management practices provided potential for sustainable resource protection on a high yield level?. The research program was conducted in one of the most important economic and agricultural regions in China, the North China Plain (NCP). The NCP is one of the major maize (Zea mays L.) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) growing areas. A literature review indicated that over the last two decades yields for wheat and maize increased by more than 20%, which had mainly been achieved by augmenting the amount of irrigation water and fertilizer. Besides the positive effects on yield an increasing amount of these input factors leads to many environmental problems. Field experiments were carried out to compare different cropping systems. Currently, the double cropping of winter wheat and summer maize is the common cultivation system in the NCP. It consists of growing two crops mostly winter wheat and summer maize in one year. The winter wheat production depends on a supplemental irrigation, because rainfall is concentrated in the summer months during the maize growing season. An alternative to the intensive double cropping system could be the single cultivation of spring maize. Relative less irrigation water is required for spring maize production, because the rainy season coincides with the main part of the maize growing season. Due to the longer growing season spring maize normally realises higher yields in comparison to summer maize. However, the total yield of a double copping system of wheat and maize is higher. The evaluated system three harvests in two years (winter wheat and summer maize in the first year followed by spring maize in the second year) forms a balance between the double cropping system and the single cropping of spring maize. Due to the fact that three crops are grown in two years total yield is higher in comparison to single cropping of spring maize (two harvests in two years) but lower in comparison to the traditional double cropping system (four harvests in two years). However the lower cropping index in contrast to the double cropping of wheat and maize results in a lower demand of the input factors irrigation water and N-fertilizer whereas in comparison to the single cropping of spring maize a higher amount of input factor is required. Besides the conduction of field experiments for the collection of empirical datasets, the CERES-Maize and CERES-Wheat models were used to quantify the effects of different irrigation management practices on crop growth, productivity and sustainability of agricultural production. Results indicated that there is a considerable potential for reducing the irrigation amount for winter wheat. However, the results also showed that a supplemental irrigation at critical growth stages seems to be essential to maintain high yields and to ensure an adequate gross margin. In a more complex approach the CERES-Maize model was used to simulate the yield of summer maize and spring maize across the NCP. The spatial and temporal climate variability was taken into account by using up to 30 years of weather data from 14 meteorological stations. The simulated results were linked to a Geographic Information System (GIS). Results indicated that the yield distinction between summer maize and spring maize was partially very low as a result of water shortage at flowering stage. A delay in sowing and the use of adapted cultivars with a later flowering date could help to increase spring maize yields. Summarizing, the results of this study indicate that water is one of the most limiting factors for crop production in the NCP. Further, the reduction of total water consumption will become more and more important with water becoming increasingly scarce and thus costly. Consequently agriculture has to undergo and is already undergoing dramatic changes. The results of this study indicated that there are several possibilities optimize cropping systems in the NCP, focussing on a more sustainable use of water while maintaining high yields. In this context, crop models are valuable tools for e.g. irrigation planning or evaluating different cropping designs in the NCP.Publication Spektralphotometrische Bestimmung des pflanzenverfügbaren Nitrats in der Bodenlösung : Entwicklung einer in-situ Messmethode zur Optimierung der Fertigation im intensiven Gemüsebau(2015) Mayer, Stephan; Müller, TorstenFor many specialized cultivations, mainly in intensive horticulture, a slight N-deficiency may dramatically reduce crop quality and yield. Hence, especially in this case, fertilizer is often applied in surplus. Compared to the real N-demand of a crop, this results in a large investment in fertilizer and may also promote nitrogen loss due to leaching. At many sites, the consequences of this are nitrate contaminated ground and surface water. An in-situ method for the continuous determination of the actual and plant-available nitrate content in soil solution, which may be fundamental for adapted and culture specific fertilization, has not yet been created for practical use in horticulture. Such a method would minimize excessive nitrate loads, reduce fertilizer use as well as omit labor required for soil sampling for Nmin determination. The aim of this thesis is to develop such an in-situ method. For this purpose, nitrate was detected and quantified in soil solution by ultraviolet spectrophotometry. Based on these measurements and a comparison with the N-demand of the chosen crop, an adapted fertilization plan was established. Recovery of the necessary soil solution was carried out in the field with the aid of suction cups, which were connected to a vacuum system, which directed the solution to a measuring cell where the spectrophotometric measurement was performed. The data was collected and evaluated on an external server. After the calculation of the actual nitrate concentration, based on the spectral data, and comparing them to the N-demand, the need and amount of fertilization was determined. This process is performed automatically. Based on numerous lab experiments, one pot and two greenhouse experiments, the suitability of the nitrate-online-measurement-system (NITROM) for the determination of nitrate concentration in soil solution was tested, calibrated and validated on a total of twelve soil types, two gardening substrates and three different cultures. For the calculation of the nitrate concentration from spectral data, simple and multiple linear regressions (SLR, MLR), as well as polynomial multiple regression (PMR), were compared. Lab results of the nitrate UV absorption between 230 and 260 nm in pure nitrate standards (0 – 1000 mg NO3-- L-1) showed highly linear relationships for several wavelengths (231 und 240 nm: R2 > 0.999, p < 0.001). Low nitrate concentrations (0 – 150 mg L-1) were precisely determined between 230 and 240 nm, while high nitrate concentrations (150 – 1000 mg L-1) were determined between 240 and 250 nm. For UV measurements in soil solution with several interfering substances, no linearity was achieved (see below). The predominant interfering substances for nitrate measurements in the field are aromatic and alkene compounds in dissolved organic carbon (DOC). The complex structure of DOC may only be considered in a calibration through a multi-wavelength approach, accounting for wavelengths from the ranges of high and low nitrate concentrations as well as the reference range without nitrate absorption (250 – 260 nm). The PMR, in comparison to SLR and MLR, fit best for the estimation of nitrate concentration from spectral data. This can be seen in the field data obtained from the first greenhouse experiment (PMR: R2 = 0.963, p < 0.001; MLR: R2 = 0.948, p < 0.001; SLR 232 nm: R2 = 0.093, p = 0.047). The pot experiment with three different soil types and two gardening substrates allowed i.a. conclusions of DOC quality on different sites and confirms the need for a site-specific calibration of the measurement method. During the second greenhouse experiment, the entire NITROM technology was tested. Data obtained during half an hour intervals over a period of five weeks was evaluated online. Using a PMR calibration, a soil nitrate content curve (n = 998) was created and fertilizer loads were adapted. The fertilization events are clearly recognizable as distinct peaks in the graph. The PMR calibration (with 15 wavelength and n = 36) was highly significant (p = 0.001) and had a R2 > 0.999. The validation of the calibration reveals a relative estimation error of 6.1 %. The suitability of this method for in-situ determination of the nitrate concentration, as well as an adapted and culture specific fertilization management on the basis of measured data, can be confirmed. Further improvements to refine the measurement technology and evaluation procedure, as well as calibration of the method for DOC, are planned.Publication Tätigkeitsbericht 2007 / Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche Chemie(2008) ; Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche ChemiePublication Tätigkeitsbericht 2008 / Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche Chemie(2009) ; Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche ChemiePublication Tätigkeitsbericht 2009 / Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche Chemie(2010) ; Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche ChemiePublication Tätigkeitsbericht 2010 / Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche Chemie(2011) Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche ChemiePublication Tätigkeitsbericht 2011 / Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche Chemie(2012) Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche ChemiePublication Tätigkeitsbericht 2012 / Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche Chemie(2013) Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche ChemiePublication Tätigkeitsbericht 2013 / Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche Chemie(2014) Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche ChemiePublication Tätigkeitsbericht 2014 / Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche Chemie(2015) Landesanstalt für Landwirtschaftliche ChemiePublication The role of soil properties and fertilization management in pathogen defense and plant microbial interactions in the rhizosphere of lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.)(2022) Windisch, Saskia Helen; Neumann, GünterSoil microorganisms are involved in nearly all relevant soil processes and considered as key players in agro-ecosystems. This is particularly relevant for the rhizosphere which is created by the activity of plant roots with dynamic impact on microbial communities, their diversity and activity. Both, beneficial but also pathogenic plant-microbial interactions in the rhizosphere are driven by root exudates and other root-induced modifications in rhizosphere chemistry, which are highly variable in space, time, composition and intensity. The physicochemical properties of the rhizosphere are influenced by numerous external factors including nutrient availability, biotic and abiotic stress, soil properties or plant genotypic variation but the related consequences for plant-microbial interactions and the consequences for plant performance and health status are still poorly understood. In this context the present study was initiated to investigate (i) the influence of the soil type on root exudation and the composition of the rhizosphere solution (ii) their impact on interactions with soil pathogens and beneficial rhizosphere microorganisms and (iii) the effect of long-term fertilization strategies (organic vs. mineral fertilization), using lettuce (Lactuca sativa) as a well-characterized model plant for studies on plant-microbial interactions in the rhizosphere.Publication Untersuchungen zur Reduzierung der Ammoniakemissionen nach der Ausbringung von Rinderflüssigmist auf Grünland(2000) Reitz, Petra; Kutzbach, Heinz DieterAmmoniakemissionen stammen zum Großteil aus der landwirtschaftlichen Tierhaltung etwa die Hälfte wird durch die Ausbringung von Flüssigmist verursacht. Unter ungünstigen Bedingungen kann der mit dem Flüssigmist ausgebrachte Ammonium-Stickstoff fast vollständig als NH3-Gas in die Atmosphäre emittieren. Negative Folgewirkungen sind die Verringerung des Düngewertes, eine ungesicherte Düngewirkung sowie nachhaltige Umweltschädigungen. Ziel der Untersuchungen war die Bestimmung der Einflussfaktoren auf die NH3-N-Emissionen nach der Ausbringung von Rinderflüssigmist auf Grünland. Es wurden verschiedene Witterungsbedingungen und verfahrenstechnische Maßnahmen wie Ausbringverfahren, Ausbringmenge und veränderte Zusammensetzung des Flüssigmistes untersucht.