Abstract
1. Twenty-eight experiments on sugar beet in 1956–8 compared ammonium sulphate, calcium nitrate and urea applied to the seedbed before sowing. The three fertilizers were compared at rates which supplied nil, 0·6 and 1·2 cwt. N/acre. Treatments in which 0·6 cwt. N/acre was held back until the end of June were also included. 2. Average responses in sugar yield were low, 0·6 cwt. N/acre provided virtually all the nitrogen required for maximum sugar production. The heavier nitrogen dressing, on the other hand, substantially increased the yield of tops. 3. Calcium nitrate and urea were as effective as ammonium sulphate at raising sugar yield. There was no damage to germination with any fertilizer, and when urea containing 4·5% biuret was used for topdressing in 1956, no damage was seen. Calcium nitrate and, to a lesser extent, urea produced more tops than ammonium sulphate. 4. Putting all the nitrogen into the seedbed was as effective as a split dressing in raising sugar yield. Leaching of nitrogen in a wet summer is therefore not important to sugar beet. Late nitrogen, on the other hand, never harmed sugar production if some had been given to the seedbed.