The Dubious Relationship Between P Use Efficiency and Loss Mitigation.
Monday, November 4, 2013: 1:00 PM
Tampa Convention Center, Room 31 and 32, Third Floor
Paul E. Fixen, International Plant Nutrition Institute Americas Group, Brookings, SD and Thomas W. Bruulsema, International Plant Nutrition Institute, Guelph, ON, Canada
Research and field experience has generally taught us that practices leading to increased efficiency of N use by crops also contribute to reduced potential for N losses to water. The case for this same relationship for P is much less convincing. Situations with high P use efficiency, using traditional efficiency expressions such as partial nutrient balance, agronomic efficiency, or recovery efficiency, may result in high loss of P to water bodies, while situations with low P use efficiency, as defined by these expressions, may result in relatively small losses. A focus on increasing P use efficiency may be a successful approach to loss mitigation where past or current P input levels have been excessive, but in other cases, mitigation often requires a more holistic approach to P stewardship that encompasses P timing and placement, conservation measures, and better utilization of all P sources to accomplish the water quality and productivity objectives of P use. The challenge is that agronomically unimportant P losses that have a negligible impact on recovery efficiency or nutrient balance, may represent important losses to water.