Clipping Management and Nitrogen Fertilization of Turfgrass: Growth, Nitrogen Utilization, and Quality

Kelly L. Kopp* and Karl Guillard

The effect of returning grass clippings on turfgrass growth and quality has not been thoroughly examined. The objective of this re­search was to determine the effects of returning grass clippings in combination with varying N rates on growth, N utilization, and quality of turfgrass managed as a residential lawn. Two field experiments using a cool-season turfgrass mixture were arranged as a 2 X 4 factorial in a randomized complete block design with three replicates. Treat­ments included two clipping management practices (returned or re­moved) and four N rates (equivalent to 0, 98, 196, and 392 kg N ha - 1 ). Soils at the two sites were a Paxton fine sandy loam (coarse-loamy, mixed, active, mesic Oxyaquic Dystrudepts) and a variant of a Hin­ckley gravelly sandy loam (sandy-skeletal, mixed, mesic Typic Udor­thents). Returning clippings was found to increase clipping dry matter yields (DMYs) from 30 to 72%, total N uptake (NUP) from 48 to 60%, N recovery by 62%, and N use efficiency (NUE) from 52 to 71%. Returning grass clippings did not decrease turfgrass quality, and improved it in some plots. We found that N fertilization rates could be reduced 50% or more without decreasing turfgrass quality when clippings were returned. Overall, returning grass clippings was found to improve growth and quality of turfgrass while reducing N fertilization needs.

Link to Research document (PDF)

Published in Crop Sci. 42:1225–1231 (2002)
Kelly L. Kopp, Dep. of Plants, Soils, and Biometeorology, Utah State Univ., 4820 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT 84322-4820; Karl Guillard, Dep. of Plant Science, Univ. of Connecticut, 1376 Storrs Road, U-4067, Storrs, CT 06269-4067. Contribution no. 1970 of the Storrs Agric. Exp. Stn. Received 2 May 2001.

*Corresponding author (kellyk@ext. usu.edu).

 

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