Nitrogen supply, demand and utilisation in barley

Unless adequate nitrogen (N) is made available, shoot numbers and yield will be restricted in barley. However, the nutrient needs to be managed carefully to reduce the risk of excess grain nitrogen concentrations and nitrate leaching.

Growth guides for wheat, barley and oilseed rape

Barley is usually grown after winter wheat (a crop with a high N demand), often on lighter, low N status soils, which are more prone to nitrate leaching. Soil N is rarely sufficient for crop requirement.

Pattern of nitrogen uptake (winter barley)

Varietal influence: Low

Other influences: N supply, temperature, sowing date

Mid-March to GS31

Benchmark: Rate of N uptake = 1.2 kg/ha/day

Benchmark: Total uptake = 65 kg/ha by GS31

Rate of N uptake increases in mid-March, as warmer conditions stimulate canopy expansion through more rapid leaf emergence and tillering.

GS31 to GS39

Benchmark: Rate of N uptake = 3.1 kg/ha/day

Benchmark: Total uptake = 128 kg/ha by GS39

Rapid N uptake continues as canopy size increases through leaf emergence and tiller survival. N uptake by the crop determines canopy size, primarily by affecting shoot number.

GS39 to GS59

Benchmark: Rate of N uptake = 1.8 kg/ha/day

Benchmark: Total uptake = 163 kg/ha by GS59

GS60 to harvest

After ear emergence, relatively little N is taken up and N is redistributed within the plant. Protein in leaves and stems is transferred to form grain protein. However, root systems remain active after flowering and will take up N, if the soil is moist and there is mineral N in the soil profile.

How to measure cereal plant populations and nitrogen uptake

Response to fertiliser nitrogen (winter barley)

When the supply of N from the soil is insufficient to meet crop N requirement, fertiliser N applications should increase yield. There is, typically, a steep yield response to the initial N fertiliser dose, before plateauing near the optimum rate and sometimes decreasing at super-optimal rates, due to lodging.

Relationship between yield and grain N concentration for winter barley

Yield (green line) and grain N% (blue line). Variety: Venture.

Nitrogen uptake/response in spring barley

  • Yield is strongly dependent on timing and rate of N fertiliser applications
  • If N is available after flowering, it will be taken up and accumulated in both straw and grains
  • Spring barley grains have the capacity to store up to around 1 mg of N per grain at a concentration of 2.4%
  • The N offtake in spring barley at harvest is typically 25–30% less than that of winter barley (i.e. 130 kg N/ha at harvest)
  • Crops grown for feed, rather than for malting, have higher fertiliser N applications and greater N offtakes

How to manage nutrients in cereals (RB209)

AHDB Nutrient management guide (RB209)



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