Register      Login
Soil Research Soil Research Society
Soil, land care and environmental research
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Agronomic responses of grain sorghum to DMPP-treated urea on contrasting soil types in north-eastern Australia

David W. Lester A D , Michael J. Bell B , Kerry L. Bell A , Massimiliano De Antoni Migliorati C , Clemens Scheer C , David Rowlings C and Peter R. Grace C
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (Scopus Affiliation ID 60028929), PO Box 2282, Toowoomba, Qld 4350, Australia.

B Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation, School of Crop and Food Sciences, University of Queensland, Gatton, Qld 4343, Australia.

C Institute for Future Environments, Queensland University of Technology, PO Box, Brisbane, Qld 4000, Australia.

D Corresponding author. Email: david.lester@daf.qld.gov.au

Soil Research 54(5) 565-571 https://doi.org/10.1071/SR15337
Submitted: 17 November 2015  Accepted: 27 April 2016   Published: 27 July 2016

Journal Compilation © CSIRO Publishing 2016 Open Access CC BY-NC-ND

Abstract

Grain sorghum grown in north-eastern Australia’s cropping region increasingly requires nitrogen (N) fertiliser to supplement the soil available N supply. The rates of N required can be high when fallows between crop seasons are short (higher cropping intensities) and when yield potentials are high.

Fertiliser N is typically applied before or at crop sowing and is vulnerable to environmental loss in the period between application and significant crop N demand due to potentially intense rainfall events in the summer-dominant rainfall environment.

Nitrification inhibitors added to urea can reduce certain gaseous loss pathways but the agronomic efficacy of these products has not been explored. Urea and urea coated with the nitrification inhibitor DMPP (3,4-dimethylpyrazole phosphate) were compared in sorghum crops grown at five research sites over consecutive summer sorghum growing seasons in south-east Queensland. Products were compared in terms of crop responses in dry matter, N uptake and grain yield, with DMPP found to produce only subtle increases on grain yield. There was no effect on dry matter or N uptake. Outcomes suggest any advantages from use of DMPP in this region are most significant in situations where higher fertiliser application rates (>80 kg N/ha) are required.

Additional keywords: agronomic efficiency, enhanced efficiency fertilisers, urea.

Introduction

North-eastern Australia has a subtropical cropping belt that extends from the Liverpool Plains region of New South Wales (~32°S) to the Central Highlands of Queensland (~22°S). Major cropping soils are black, grey and brown Vertosols, black, red or brown Sodosols, red and brown Chromosols and Ferrosols (Webb et al. 1997). Since change in land use from grazing to cultivation, native soil carbon and nitrogen (N) fertility has reduced (Dalal and Mayer 1986) such that N is one of the most limiting nutrients for grain production (Dalal and Probert 1997).

Agro-ecological conditions allow production of summer and winter cereal, legume, oilseed and fibre crops, with sowing primarily occurring once the soil profile accumulates sufficient water to avoid crop failure from lack of soil water supply (Freebairn et al. 1997). Fallows are essential for successful dryland cropping in the region (Shaw 1997) and are a key management tactic in rainfed farming (Freebairn et al. 2002).

Flexibility is therefore important when planning crop sequences, and the term ‘opportunity cropping’ describes the recommended approach (Russell and Jones 1996; Shaw 1997). Opportunity cropping is the planting of a crop as soon as the soil profile has stored sufficient moisture to ensure economic viability; however, response to N fertiliser may alter with cropping intensity under this framework as it may limit N mineralisation from soil organic matter to fully meet crop requirements.

Grain sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) is the dominant summer cereal crop in the region (Unkovich et al. 2009) and responses to fertiliser N have been shown to vary depending on the length of the preceding fallow. Fallow lengths of >12 months (long-fallow) have shown little or no response to fertiliser N; by contrast, fallows of <6 months are highly N responsive on soils with a cropping history of more than 30 years (Lester et al. 2008). Further intensification of cropping is required in attempts to further increase food production, requiring larger and more frequent inputs of fertiliser N. A proportion of this fertiliser can be lost to the environment by gaseous (denitrification and volatilisation) or water (leaching) mediated loss pathways, with production of nitrous oxide (N2O), a potent greenhouse gas, an issue of current concern. To improve the crop utilisation of applied N, ‘enhanced efficiency fertilisers’ (EEFs) have the potential to enhance the agronomic and recovery efficiencies of fertiliser, while simultaneously reducing its environmental losses. One of the available approaches is the addition of a nitrification inhibitor, which has a higher potential to reduce N2O emissions from soil than other measures (Ruser and Schulz 2015).

A preliminary study on a Vertosol comparing several EEFs found the nitrification inhibitor 3,4-dimethylpyrazole phosphate (DMPP) was highly effective at reducing annual N2O losses by 83% (or 1.91 kg N2O-N/ha.year), compared with standard urea, but had no significant effect on grain yield or dry matter N uptake of a grain sorghum crop (Scheer et al. 2016). De Antoni Migliorati et al. (2014) reported that addition of DMPP to a Ferrosol cropped to both wheat and maize in combination substantially reduced N2O loss during the summer season, when the majority of emissions occurred, and endorsed future research focusing on fertilisation of the summer crop.

The aim of this study was to evaluate DMPP coated urea and untreated urea in grain sorghum production systems with differing cropping intensities grown on two contrasting soil types (Ferrosol and Vertosol).


Materials and methods

Experimental site descriptions and crop agronomy

Research locations used where the J. Bjelke Petersen Research Station (Kingaroy, 26°34ʹS, 151°50ʹE) and Kingsthorpe Research Station (west of Toowoomba, 27°31ʹS, 151°47ʹE), and a commercial property at the locality of Irongate in southern Queensland (27°35ʹS, 151°30ʹE). Climatically the region is subtropical with warm humid summers and mild dry winters. Soils are classified as manganic eutrophic Brown Ferrosol at Kingaroy (Isbell 2002), and self-mulching Black Vertosols at Kingsthorpe (Isbell 2002; Powell et al. 1988) and Irongate (Beckmann and Thompson 1960; Isbell 2002).

Soil samples were collected to 1.2 m using depth increments shown in Table 1. Chemical methods for soil analysis were conducted according to those described in Rayment and Lyons (2011). Site bulk density was determined using the intact core method of Cresswell and Hamilton (2002). Mineral N at sowing was measured using the sum of depth increments (Table 1) with nitrate and ammonium determined using method 7B1 (Rayment and Lyons 2011) multiplied by the bulk density for the increment layer (Dalgliesh and Foale 1998). Plant available water content (PAWC) was estimated using gravimetric moisture at 105°C, site bulk density, and a sorghum crop lower limit at analogous sites in accordance with Dalgliesh and Foale (1998).


Table 1.  Key chemical properties for profile soil layers of three field sites
TC, Total carbon; TN, total nitrogen; Col P, Colwell P; ECEC, effective cation exchange capacity
Click to zoom

Comparison rates for urea and DMPP-treated urea (Entec®) at Kingsthorpe in 2013–14 were 0, 40, 60, 80, 100 and 160 kg N/ha (four replicates); at Kingaroy in both 2013–14 and 2014–15 were 0, 40, 60, 80, 100, 120 and 240 kg N/ha (three replicates each year); and 0, 40, 80 and 160 kg N/ha for both Kingsthorpe and Irongate in 2014–15 (six replicates each year). Nitrogen treatments were band applied at 5 cm depth to the side of the crop row at sowing, with the exception of the Irongate site where an earlier sowing attempt (10 Sept 2014) was removed with herbicide and replanted in December due to poor crop establishment. Agronomic management at each site is summarised in Table 2.


Table 2.  Agronomic details of experiments comparing DMPP treatment against standard urea for five grain sorghum crops
Click to zoom

Aboveground biomass was collected at physiological maturity (Vanderlip and Reeves 1972) from either 1 or 2 m of crop row, oven-dried at 65°C, weighed and processed (mulched, subsampled and finely ground to 0.5 mm) for determination of N concentration using the combustion (Dumas) method. Nitrogen uptake at maturity (kg/ha) was calculated by multiplying the aboveground biomass (kg/ha) by the biomass N concentration (mg/kg). Grain was machine harvested from two crop rows and grain yield calculated with correction to grain receival moisture of 13.5%. Agronomic efficiency (AE, kg/kg) has been defined as the ratio of grain yield to N supply (Ladha et al. 2005) and is applied here as:

E1

where YF is grain yield (kg/ha) in treatment with fertiliser N applied per plot (FN, kg/ha) and Y0 is crop yield (kg/ha) measured in a control treatment with nil fertiliser application.

Experimental design and statistical analysis

The experimental design at Kingaroy was a strip-plot for both years (KRY13–14, KRY14–15) and a randomised complete block design was used at Kingsthorpe (KTH13–14). Split-plot designs with N rate randomly allocated to the main-plot and the product randomly allocated to the sub-plots were used in 2014–15 at both Kingsthorpe (KTH14–15) and Irongate (IRN14–15).

The five trials (i.e. properties) were analysed together in a linear mixed model framework fitting separate residual variances for each experiment. Analyses were performed in Genstat 17th edition using the REML procedure (VSN International 2015) and the level of significance was set at the 5% level. The N rate was treated as a continuous variable and the square of the N rate was also added to account for curvature in the trend. Non-significant terms between product and properties with the linear and quadratic N rate were dropped from the final model. For the dry matter and dry matter N uptake the number of plants was used as a covariate, and if significant for the property this was included in the cross–trial analysis. Predictions of the fitted lines were made at N rates 0, 40, 60, 80, 100, 120, 160 for tables, and at intervals of 10 from 0 to 160 for producing graphs.

The focus of this paper is on the comparison between the two N products: DMPP and Urea. The agronomic measures associated with the N rate responses presented in this paper are a subset from a larger research program for publication at a future date, including fertiliser N recovery and assessment of N losses.


Results

A consolidated table of significant effects on dry matter, N uptake and grain yield for the five sites indicates that the interaction between N rate and property was significant for all parameters (Table 3). The N product (Urea or DMPP) had a significant interaction with grain yield.


Table 3.  Consolidated table of significant effects on dry matter, nitrogen uptake and grain yield of grain sorghum comparing Urea and DMPP at five research sites
DT, dropped term; NS, not significant; *, significant at the 0.05 probability level; **, significant at the 0.01 probability level; ***, significant at the 0.001 probability level
T3

Aboveground dry matter at maturity

The influence of starting mineral N level and in-crop rainfall on overall fertiliser N responsiveness is seen in Fig. 1. The three sites with low starting N are highly responsive KRY13–14 (Fig. 1a), KTH13–14 (Fig. 1b) and KTH14–15 (Fig. 1d), and the remaining sites KRY14–15 (Fig. 1c) and IRN14–15 (Fig. 1e) show smaller increases with N application.


Fig. 1.  Predicted dry matter (kg/ha) of grain sorghum at physiological maturity from Urea and DMPP treatments at the five sites: (a) KRY13–14; (b) KTH13–14; (c) KRY14–15; (d) KTH14–15; and (e) IRN14–15. Error bars represent standard error. There was no significant difference between the products.
Click to zoom

Significant effects on dry matter growth did not include product (i.e. DMPP v. Urea) either as a main effect or any interaction with Property or N rate (Table 3). Plant number had a significant effect and assisted in adjusting predicted means based on varying crop establishment for some plots. The significant Property × N rate interaction reflects the varying scale of N response.

Dry matter N uptake

The N uptake at maturity was not significantly affected by the N product (Table 3). The interaction between property and N rate reflects the dry matter N uptake (data not shown) which is analogous to that of dry matter itself (Fig. 1).

Grain yield

Grain yield increased with N rate at all sites except IRN14–15, which showed no response (Fig. 2). The analyses showed an overall difference in the curved lines across N levels for product (Table 3); however, this trend was not strong enough to show significant differences in product in the individual analyses of each trial.


Fig. 2.  Predicted grain yield (kg/ha) from DMPP and Urea treatments for grain sorghum at the five sites: (a) KRY13–14; (b) KTH13–14; (c) KRY14–15; (d) KTH14–15; and (e) IRN14–15. Error bars represent standard error. There was no significant difference between the products.
Click to zoom

As the Product.Property term and its interactions with N rate were not significant, we can explore the product effects averaged over the properties. Plotting the predictions of grain yield for DMPP and Urea suggests a slight efficiency gain with DMPP of ~200 kg/ha in grain yield for N applied at 80 to 120 kg N/ha (Fig. 3) but there were no significant differences between DMPP and Urea at any application rate so these results should be interpreted cautiously. Addition of DMPP increased the agronomic efficiency at the 80–120 kg N/ha by ≈2.2 kg grain/kg fertiliser N. At 90% of maximum grain yield the difference in N application rate between Urea and DMPP was ~10 kg N/ha.


Fig. 3.  Predicted grain yield of grain sorghum fertilised with DMPP or Urea.
F3

The significant product by N rate interaction on grain yield (Table 3) was further explored for the three site years with the greatest N response (KRY13–14, KTH13–14 and KTH14–15) but no individual site produced any significant effects of product or its interactions due to high variability in the data.


Discussion

Developing appropriate N management strategies that can be adopted by farmers is crucial for improving crop production and fertiliser N use efficiency, with the use of nitrification inhibitors providing a potential management option (Fageria and Baligar 2005). The effectiveness of nitrification inhibitors (and other EEFs) have been demonstrated to be strongly dependent on site-specific conditions, soil texture and climate (Irigoyen et al. 2003). Reduction in N2O emissions over the summer period from the use of DMPP-treated urea has been substantial (De Antoni Migliorati et al. 2016; De Antoni Migliorati et al. 2015; Scheer et al. 2016); however, there are no published studies evaluating the agronomic impacts of DMPP-treated urea on grain sorghum production in subtropical environments. Our study found that DMPP had a nominal grain yield advantage when considered over all the research sites in this study and this was only apparent at the higher fertiliser N application rates (Fig. 3).

A contradiction therefore exists between how DMPP can decrease N2O emission by over 60% (De Antoni Migliorati et al. 2016; De Antoni Migliorati et al. 2015; Scheer et al. 2016), but only nominally increases grain yield. The explanation may partly lie in the higher N application rates. De Antoni Migliorati et al. (2016) found that N2O emissions increased exponentially with increasing urea N rate in both the KRY13–14 and the KTH13–14 experiments, with the incremental increase in emissions at Kingaroy representing 0.5% and 2.2% of added fertiliser N (0–80N and 80–120N respectively), whereas at Kingsthorpe the incremental increase represented 1.0% and 1.6% of added N fertiliser (0–80N and 80–160N respectively). Conversely, the AE (kg extra grain produced/kg additional N applied) decreased by 40% (Kingaroy) and 20% (Kingsthorpe) for the higher N increment (80–120 or 80–160 kg N/ha at Kingaroy and Kingsthorpe respectively) compared with the first 80 kg N/ha applied at each location (Fig. 2). Although emissions data for the 2014/15 studies are not yet available, the decrease in AE at higher incremental N rates in the equivalent studies at both Kingaroy and Kingsthorpe sites (KRY14–15 and KTH14–15) is again evident (Fig. 2), and at the more N-responsive Kingsthorpe site, the reduction in AE for the 80–160N increment relative to the 0–80N increment was >60%. Collectively, these data suggest that the relative reduction in emissions at high N rates are likely to always far exceed the incremental grain yield response to any reduction in total N losses.

Although not significant at any individual site, the nominal yield improvement from DMPP-treated urea is most likely where N application rates are in excess of 80 kg N/ha. Circumstances in which fertiliser rates in excess of 80 kg N/ha would be required in this region include cereals under irrigation (high crop N demand), in the higher rainfall areas where two summer crops can be grown in succession with a 6–8-month winter fallow, or where rainfall conditions allow double cropping opportunities (i.e. summer sorghum immediately following winter cereal harvest). At a long-term nitrogen × phosphorus experimental site, sorghum crops grown on the 6–8-month winter fallow had linear responses to N fertiliser rates commonly up to 80 or 120 kg N/ha (Lester et al. 2008) and average results across sites in this study suggest DMPP may reduce application rate by ~10 kg N/ha.

DMPP is unlikely to be beneficial where the relative contribution of fertiliser N to total crop supply is low, such as with higher starting mineral N profiles (i.e. typically fallows >12 months, termed ‘long fallows’) or where crop N demands are likely to be low due to use of moisture conservation techniques such as double skip sowing (Whish et al. 2005). Our results also suggest that at application rates <60 kg N/ha, there is currently no benefit in using DMPP. The linear polynomial contrast was not significant for product, therefore on that part of the response surface the crop appears to have utilised equivalent amounts of N from either DMPP or urea.

These findings were generated largely from research station sites at which conditions were managed through pre-cropping and mineral N removal to aid fertiliser responsiveness. This contrasts with commercial production systems in which farmers regularly apply N to meet water-limited yield potentials (Strong and Holford 1997). Further examination of enhanced efficiency fertilisers under commercially relevant conditions would provide an improved N decision framework for farmers. Conducting future studies using a common set of application rates across the sites would improve the model fitting, and comparing three or more products may allow better differentiation of EFFs from urea-based fertilisers.


Conclusions

While there is consistent evidence that DMPP reduces N2O emissions, particularly at higher N application rates, results from our experiments are inconclusive for showing consistently greater N fertiliser use efficiency in subtropical grain sorghum production. However, agronomic efficiency gains of ~2.2 kg grain/kg N were apparent at high application rates in the range of 80–120 kg N/ha, with this increase delivering a reduction in the optimum N application rate of ~10 kg N/ha.

DMPP appears more likely to be beneficial under irrigated cropping with higher crop N demand and associated high N fertiliser requirement, or in higher cropping intensity rainfed systems in which N fertiliser is applied to meet a greater proportion of crop N demand. Further research evaluating DMPP under these circumstances would improve understanding.



Acknowledgements

This research was jointly funded by the Australian Governments’ Department of Agriculture and Water Resources (Project 1202.004) and the Grain Research and Development Corporation (Project UQ00066) as part of the National Nitrous Oxide Research Program (NANORP).


Staff from the Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries are gratefully acknowledged in delivering the field trial program, particularly Gary Harch, Peter Want, Rod Obel, Scott Campbell and James Doodson at Kingaroy Research Station; Lawrence Smith, James Henderson and Patricia Balzer at the Leslie Research Facility; and Anthony Collins and Don Browne at Hermitage Research Station.


References

Beckmann GG, Thompson CH (1960) Soils and land use in the Kurrawa Area, Darling Downs, Queensland. CSIRO Division of Soils No. 37. (CSIRO Division of Soils: Melbourne)

Cresswell HP, Hamilton GJ (2002) Bulk density and pore space relations. In ‘Soil physical measurement and interpretation for land evaluation’. (Eds N McKenzie, K Coughlan, H Cresswell) pp. 35–58. (CSIRO Publishing: Collingwood, Australia)

Dalal RC, Mayer RJ (1986) Long-Term Trends in Fertility of Soils under Continuous Cultivation and Cereal Cropping in Southern Queensland. II. Total organic carbon and its rate of loss from the soil profile. Australian Journal of Soil Research 24, 281–292.
Long-Term Trends in Fertility of Soils under Continuous Cultivation and Cereal Cropping in Southern Queensland. II. Total organic carbon and its rate of loss from the soil profile.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 1:CAS:528:DyaL28XkvFKmsLw%3D&md5=eee9d3971a82b96b8065c3deb1b41a1fCAS |

Dalal RC, Probert ME (1997) Soil nutrient depletion. In ‘Sustainable crop production in the sub tropics: an Australian perspective’. (Eds AL Clarke, PB Wylie). (Queensland Department of Primary Industries: Brisbane, Qld)

Dalgliesh NP, Foale MA (1998) ‘Soil matters: monitoring soil water and nutrients in dryland farming.’(Agricultural Production Systems Research Unit, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization: Toowoomba, Qld)

De Antoni Migliorati M, Scheer C, Grace PR, Rowlings DW, Bell MJ, McGree J (2014) Influence of different nitrogen rates and DMPP nitrification inhibitor on annual N2O emissions from a subtropical wheat-maize cropping system. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 186, 33–43.
Influence of different nitrogen rates and DMPP nitrification inhibitor on annual N2O emissions from a subtropical wheat-maize cropping system.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 1:CAS:528:DC%2BC2cXmsVCjtbo%3D&md5=0844cd1e106bc3431f689d097fcc0b36CAS |

De Antoni Migliorati M, Parton WJ, Del Grosso SJ, Grace PR, Bell MJ, Strazzabosco A, Rowlings DW, Scheer C, Harch G (2015) Legumes or nitrification inhibitors to reduce N2O emissions from subtropical cereal cropping systems in Oxisols? Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 213, 228–240.
Legumes or nitrification inhibitors to reduce N2O emissions from subtropical cereal cropping systems in Oxisols?Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 1:CAS:528:DC%2BC2MXhtlylt7bM&md5=4e23b5f7c264aa70dc776b66341b6dbdCAS |

De Antoni Migliorati M, Bell M, Lester D, Rowlings DW, Scheer C, de Rosa D, Grace PR (2016) Comparison of grain yields and N2O emissions on Oxisol and Vertisol soils in response to fertiliser N applied as urea or urea coated with nitrification inhibitor 3,4-dimethylpyrazole phosphate. Soil Research 54, 552–564.
Comparison of grain yields and N2O emissions on Oxisol and Vertisol soils in response to fertiliser N applied as urea or urea coated with nitrification inhibitor 3,4-dimethylpyrazole phosphate.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Fageria NK, Baligar VC (2005) Enhancing nitrogen use efficiency in crop plants. In ‘Advances in agronomy. Vol. 88’. (Ed. DL Sparks) pp. 97–185. (Elsevier Academic Press Inc.: San Diego)

Freebairn DM, Connolly RD, Dimes J, Wylie PB (1997) Crop sequencing. In ‘Sustainable crop production in the sub-tropics: an Australian perspective’. (Eds AL Clarke, PB Wylie) pp. 289–305. (Queensland Department of Primary Industries: Brisbane, Qld)

Freebairn DM, Smith GD, Connolly RD, Tullberg JN (2002) Crop rotation and farming systems: tropics and subtropics and swelling soils. In ‘Encyclopedia of soil science’. (Ed. R Lal) pp. 250–253. (Marcel Dekker: New York, NY)

Irigoyen I, Muro J, Azpilikueta M, Aparicio-Tejo P, Lamsfus C (2003) Ammonium oxidation kinetics in the presence of nitrification inhibitors DCD and DMPP at various temperatures. Australian Journal of Soil Research 41, 1177–1183.
Ammonium oxidation kinetics in the presence of nitrification inhibitors DCD and DMPP at various temperatures.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 1:CAS:528:DC%2BD3sXot1Cgt70%3D&md5=92d1b1fadc60b4d0482344e6dd14bd3cCAS |

Isbell RF (2002) ‘The Australian soil classification.’ Revised Edn. (CSIRO Publishing: Collingwood)

Ladha JK, Pathak H, Krupnik TJ, Six J, van Kessel C (2005) Efficiency of fertilizer nitrogen in cereal production: retrospects and prospects. In ‘Advances in agronomy. Vol. 87’. (Ed. DL Sparks) pp. 85–156. (Elsevier Academic Press Inc.: San Diego)

Lester DW, Birch CJ, Dowling CW (2008) Fertiliser N and P applications on two Vertosols in North Eastern Australia. 1. Comparative grain yield responses for two different cultivation ages. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 59, 247–259.
Fertiliser N and P applications on two Vertosols in North Eastern Australia. 1. Comparative grain yield responses for two different cultivation ages.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 1:CAS:528:DC%2BD1cXjtVKjtL8%3D&md5=a77ebffde1b8e3881c56b9728d9684d6CAS |

Powell BS, Baker DE, Christianos NG (1988) Soils of the Kingsthorpe Field Station, eastern Darling Downs. Land Resources Branch, Queensland Department of Primary Industries, Project Report QR88003, Brisbane, Qld.

Rayment GE, Lyons DJ (2011) ‘Soil chemical methods: Australasia.’ (CSIRO: Collingwood)

Ruser R, Schulz R (2015) The effect of nitrification inhibitors on the nitrous oxide (N2O) release from agricultural soils—a review. Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science 178, 171–188.
The effect of nitrification inhibitors on the nitrous oxide (N2O) release from agricultural soils—a review.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 1:CAS:528:DC%2BC2MXkvVahsrs%3D&md5=f0ad4ead1942107e1f9d32b8156d6654CAS |

Russell JS, Jones PN (1996) Continuous, alternate and double crop systems on a Vertisol in subtropical Australia. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 36, 823–830.
Continuous, alternate and double crop systems on a Vertisol in subtropical Australia.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Scheer C, Rowlings DW, De Antoni Migliorati M, Lester DW, Bell MJ, Grace PR (2016) Effect of enhanced efficiency fertilisers on nitrous oxide emissions in a sub-tropical cereal cropping system Soil Research 54, 544–551.
Effect of enhanced efficiency fertilisers on nitrous oxide emissions in a sub-tropical cereal cropping systemCrossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Shaw RJ (1997) Salinity and sodicity. In ‘Sustainable crop production in the sub tropics: an Australian perspective’. (Eds AL Clarke, PB Wylie) pp. 79–96. (Queensland Department of Primary Industries: Brisbane, Qld)

Strong WM, Holford ICR (1997) Fertilisers and manures. In ‘Sustainable crop production in the sub tropics: an Australian perspective’. (Eds AL Clarke, PB Wylie) pp. 214–234. (Queensland Department of Primary Industries: Brisbane, Qld)

Unkovich MJ, Baldock J, Marvanek S (2009) Which crops should be included in a carbon accounting system for Australian agriculture? Crop and Pasture Science 60, 617–626.
Which crops should be included in a carbon accounting system for Australian agriculture?Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Vanderlip RL, Reeves HE (1972) Growth stages of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench.). Agronomy Journal 64, 13–16.
Growth stages of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench.).Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

VSN International (2015) Genstat for Windows 17th Edition. (VSN International: Hemel Hempstead, UK). Available at www.Genstat.co.uk

Webb AA, Grundy MJ, Powell BS, Littleboy M (1997) The Australian sub-tropical cereal belt: soils, climate and agriculture. In ‘Sustainable crop production in the sub-tropics: an Australian perspective’. (Eds AL Clarke, PB Wylie) pp. 8–23. (Queensland Department of Primary Industries: Brisbane, Qld)

Whish J, Butler G, Castor M, Cawthray S, Broad IJ, Carberry PS, Hammer GL, McLean G, Routley R, Yeates SJ (2005) Modelling the effects of row configuration on sorghum yield reliability in north-eastern Australia. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 56, 11–23.
Modelling the effects of row configuration on sorghum yield reliability in north-eastern Australia.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |