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Southwest Buenos Aires: why does fertilization improve water efficiency?

Journalist. Bahía Blanca Sports Journalists Circle. He was editor of the magazine Encestando (1985-2000). Since 1987 he has worked in the newspaper La Nueva Provincia (today La Nueva.). He went through the Sports, The Region and The City sections, where he currently works. He has specialized in agricultural journalism since 2001. Member of the Buenos Aires Association of Agricultural Journalists. Responsible for the websites of the Livestock Breeders Association (AGA) and Abopa.

The search for tools that contribute to greater productivity and efficiency in sustainable environments is the minimum objective in the highly productive areas of Argentina that are located in the so-called Nucleus, where the average annual rainfall is around 1,100 millimeters.

Transport the same intentions to the region near the port of Bahía Blanca, with soils of different characteristics and a rainfall range of 600 millimeters —example: until this week in the Villa Iris area, 110 kilometers from our city, it had rained 290 mm — requires a necessary alliance with technological innovation.

In this semi-arid context, the question is the following: how convenient is crop fertilization?

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Dr. Martín Díaz Zorita, who graduated from the National University of La Pampa, developed his master’s degree at the National University of the South and received his doctorate at the University of Kentucky, United States, explains it this way: “Fertilization plays a role key in semi-arid areas, since it balances the concentration of the elements at the necessary time and in the appropriate quantity so that photosynthesis occurs and transpiration can be efficient. If there is something that is missing in semi-arid environments it is water, but with what we have we achieve the concentration of nutrients that allows us to generate more life.”

He also said that quite a few research works show that the greatest impact—whether relative or absolute—in kilos of grains or dry matter produced by each millimeter of water in response to fertilization is greater in semi-arid areas.

In this sense, Díaz Zorita considered a doctoral thesis presented – at the UNS – by Carolina L. Gaggioli, from the UNLP, who evaluated the contribution of fertilization in winter crops in soils of the semi-arid region in years with abundance of water and with drought.

“Dr. Gaggioli confirmed that fertilization always improves water use efficiency, but not only in kilos, but in value. That is, it is advisable not to neglect nutrition in semi-arid environments because, in a proven way, in this way we give value to water,” says Díaz Zorita, who spoke with The New during the events for the 30 years of Fertilizar AC held recently in Buenos Aires.

Dr. Martín Díaz Zorita was recognized for his contribution to research on soil care.

“How does a semi-arid region connect with fertilization? In the simplest way: agricultural systems are alive because plants grow. And for a plant to grow it requires transpiring, but not only water, but a mineral solution enters there that gives meaning to the formation of its structures. That is, in a pasture it is grass and in a crop crop it is the structures that will produce the grains,” he says.

“The nutrients are in balance with that solution and give meaning to a historical average productivity to something that follows natural rhythms,” he describes.

“When we incorporate improvements we plant a pasture, which is naturally native; When we do intensive grazing and when we seek to make crops more efficient in producing biomass and then making grain, we are adapting the plant part with management, or with genetic improvement, but the soil at its level of response continues with an ancient memory of supply and dynamics of nutrients”, he defines.

Díaz Zorita graduated from UNLP as an agricultural engineer in March 1991 and, just one month later, began a master’s degree in Agronomy at UNS.

“The topic of the master’s degree, carried out with Dr. Norman Peinemann, was on the relationship between soil properties and wheat production in the semi-arid environment. It was a research project carried out together with Dr. Daniel Buschiazzo, also a graduate of UNS and already a professor at UNLP,” he recalls.

Roberto Rotondaro, head of Fertilizar AC, at the celebration of the entity’s 30 years, where Dr. Díaz Zorita was honored.

“In Bahía Blanca I had my belonging groups. Thus I was able to coincide with Alberto Quiroga and be part of the organic matter team together with doctors Ramón Rosell, Juan Galantini, Julio Iglesias, María Rosa Landriscini, Oscar Bravo, Mercedes Ron and Pablo Zalba, all teachers and researchers who analyzed, in depth, the role of the soil in the production systems of the semi-arid region,” he says.

From that furnished apartment at General Paz 48, Díaz Zorita moved to work at INTA General Villegas (until 2002), although in the interregnum he completed his doctorate in Kentucky. “The work was to link a deep discussion about the role of soil physics and crop production. I had the guidance of doctors John H. Grove and Edd Perfect with an agronomic and theoretical vision to interpret the value of direct sowing as a consolidator of the structural state of agricultural soils,” he recalls.

Díaz Zorita has been working at UNLP for 5 years (most recently, as a full professor in crop production). He is also the coordinator of the Fertilizar AC Technical Committee and, although he now resides in Santa Rosa, he always remembers his beginnings: “In Bahía Blanca I learned the value of teamwork. It is something that marks me to this day.”

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AGRICULTURAL SCENARIO 2023: ALL THE YEAR’S COLUMNS APPEAR IN THIS LINK

AGRICULTURAL SCENARIO 2022: ALL THE COLUMNS OF THE YEAR APPEAR IN THIS LINK

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