METHODS of FERTilizer Application
METHODS of FERTilizer Application
METHODS of FERTilizer Application
a) Broadcasting
Suitable for crops with dense stand, the plant roots permeate the whole volume of
the soil, large doses of fertilizers are applied and insoluble phosphatic fertilizers
such as rock phosphate are used.
The main objectives of broadcasting the fertilizers at sowing time are to uniformly
distribute the fertilizer over the entire field and to mix it with soil.
Disadvantages of broadcasting
i) Nutrients cannot be fully utilized by plant roots as they move laterally over long
distances.
ii) The weed growth is stimulated all over the field.
iii) Nutrients are fixed in the soil as they come in contact with a large mass of soil.
b) Placement
In this method, fertilizer is placed at the bottom of the plough furrow in a continuous
band during the process of ploughing.
This method is suitable for areas where soil becomes quite dry upto few cm below
the soil surface and soils having a heavy clay pan just below the plough sole layer.
It refers to the application of fertilizers into the soil close to the seed or plant in
order to supply the nutrients in adequate amounts to the roots of growing plants.
The common methods to place fertilizers close to the seed or plant are as follows:
a) Drilling
In this method, the fertilizer is applied at the time of sowing by means of a seed-
cum-fertilizer drill. This places fertilizer and the seed in the same row but at
different depths. Although this method has been found suitable for the application
of phosphatic and potassic fertilizers in cereal crops, but sometimes germination of
seeds and young plants may get damaged due to higher concentration of soluble
salts.
b) Side dressing
It refers to the spread of fertilizer in between the rows and around the plants. The
common methods of side-dressing are
Placement of fertilizers around the trees like mango, apple, grapes, papaya etc.
c) Band placement
i) Hill placement
Row placement
d) Pellet application
i) When the fertilizer is placed, there is minimum contact between the soil and the
fertilizer, and thus fixation of nutrients is greatly reduced.
ii) The weeds all over the field can not make use of the fertilizers.
It refers to the application of solution of N, P2O5 and K2O in the ratio of 1:2:1 and
1:1:2 to young plants at the time of transplanting, particularly for vegetables.
b) Foliar application
Foliar application is effective for the application of minor nutrients like iron, copper,
boron, zinc and manganese. Sometimes insecticides are also applied along with
fertilizers.
Liquid fertilizers for injection into the soil may be of either pressure or non-pressure
types.
e) Aerial application.
In areas where ground application is not practicable, the fertilizer solutions are
applied by aircraft particularly in hilly areas, in forest lands, in grass lands or in
sugarcane fields etc.