You’re working from PEI, so we must ask you about potatoes! You’ve worked on strategies to enhance phosphorus and nitrogen use efficiencies in acidic soils. Could you explain why this is such a critical challenge for potato farmers, and what solutions your research has uncovered?
Potatoes are the fifth most important crop in Canada after corn, wheat, canola, and soybean, contributing around $2 billion in farm cash receipts in 2023. Phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) are the most limiting nutrients for potato growth, and supplying higher amounts than crop requirements constitutes an economic loss to growers but also negatively impacts the environment.
Potatoes have poor nutrient use efficiency due to their shallow root systems and high nutrient demand to meet their rapid growth and development. Applying higher amounts of P and N than crop requirements results in an economic loss to growers and also negatively impacts the environment. P fertilizer is applied in excess of the potato P requirements in acidic soils to compensate for high P fixation by amorphous aluminium (Al) and iron (Fe) compounds, which are abundant in acidic Canadian podzolic soils. We developed an agro-environmental model for potatoes based on the phosphorus saturation indicator (PSI), which is the ratio between plant-available soil phosphorus (P) and Al (P/Al). We found that when the PSI was greater than 10 percent—when the amount of Al in the soil is more than ten times the amount of P (P/Al x 100)—potato plants were unlikely to benefit from further addition of phosphorus fertilizer. By adjusting phosphorus fertilizer application to this ratio, farmers could save up to 100 kg of phosphorus per hectare compared with the current recommendations.
Developing a reliable nitrogen test that can reflect actual N availability at critical crop growth stages is challenging in humid environments like Eastern Canada due to the high variability and mobility of nitrogen. Our team has focused on quantifying soil N supply to subsequent crops using different techniques. Using a plant bioassay approach (total N accumulated in the whole plant in the absence of N fertilizer application), we found that the soil alone could supply an average of 115 kg N ha-1 to subsequent potatoes. We also used the 15N isotopic technique (which acts as a tracer to follow N transformation and movement) to quantify soil-derived N to silage corn with and without long-term regular application of manure (26 years). Regular application of manure reduced silage corn N fertilizer requirements by 50 to 100 kg N ha-1. At silage corn harvest time, 22-58% of applied N fertilizer was still present in the soil, 60-90% of which was stored in macroaggregates. The N stored in macroaggregates decreased by up to 75% over the winter, and little residual N was taken up by the following crop, implying that N stored in macroaggregates is transient. We also estimated cover crop-derived N contribution to potatoes using the 15N isotopic technique. We found that when crop residues were incorporated in the fall prior to seeding potatoes in the following spring, the N requirement of potatoes was satisfied more from soil-derived N than from previously incorporated crop residues in the absence of N fertilizer application.
The living laboratory approach is all about collaboration. If you could invite anyone, living or historical, to join your research team for a season, who would it be and why?
I would invite a grade 12 high school student who did not grow up on farm and who is planning to enroll in agricultural sciences. I would let him accompany my team in different activities, meet growers, and my colleagues working in different areas. This would give him an insider’s view of what he can expect and what the future job may entail. This opportunity would empower him and boost his motivation throughout his undergraduate studies and maybe inspire them to become a soil scientist!