Soil Fertility and Management
Soil fertility is essential for plant growth and to optimize agronomic crop yield. Use Penn State Extension’s extensive resources on soil fertility and management of agronomic crops, including quality assessment and conditions such as crusting, compaction, and rill erosion. You’ll also find tips on levels of nitrogen, potassium and phosphorus, crop rotation, and no-till yields.
Soil Health and Conservation Practices
Healthy soil is the foundation for profitable, productive, and environmentally sound agronomic production. There are many ways to optimize the health of the soil, but you first need to understand the soil's physical, chemical, and biological components if you want to manage them successfully.
There are lots of different things that can affect soil quality. Wet conditions in fall and spring, for example, can lead to problems with severe soil compaction during harvest or manure spreading. Soil compaction can drastically affect the growth of crops when their roots hit the compacted layer. It can also lead to issues with compaction infiltration.
Popular ways of improving soil health include using a no-till system and cover crops. Both bring many advantages, such as reduced soil erosion, improved soil physical properties and soil quality, and improved water quality. It requires careful management, in particular for livestock farms as continuous applications of manure can lead to high concentrations of phosphorus. Soil tests can measure these levels as well as levels of different nutrients.
Soil Fertility and Nutrient Management for Agronomic Crops
Nutrients are essential for maintaining soil health and soil fertility. Soil fertility can be improved by incorporating the 4Rs. These are:
- Right fertilizer source: matching fertilizer type to crop needs
- Right rate: matches the amount of fertilizer each crop needs
- Right time: allowing nutrients to be available when they are needed
- Right place: providing nutrients where crops can use them
Different crops take up nutrients in unique ways which means careful nutrient management is imperative. Much research is being done to discover how to optimize carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus management, because of the vital role these nutrients play. Potassium also has a critical role to play in crop production.
Nitrogen is present in the air that we breathe, but it can only be used by plants after it’s fixed, or taken from the air. A process called the nitrogen cycle controls levels in the soil. Two processes make up the cycle: immobilization and mineralization.
How much nitrogen is in the soil changes almost daily, making it difficult for producers to predict and manage levels. Two methods for testing nitrate levels are currently being researched: Pre-sidedress Soil Nitrate Test (PSNT) and the leaf chlorophyll meter test. Both allow producers to determine when to top-dress nitrogen or apply a nitrate fertilizer. Several other tools are available for in-season nitrogen management decision making, for example, the Late Season Stalk Nitrate Test for Corn.
The Managing and Predicting Soil Carbon and Nitrogen in Agronomic Cropping Systems workshop helps you understand the importance of managing soil carbon and nitrogen, in regard to maintaining soil health, improving crop yields, and protecting the environment.
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ConferencesCrops Conference
Length 6 hours, 30 minutesRecap the 2025 crop production season, discover agronomic innovations, and earn valuable certification credits. Attendees gain expert insights, network with industry leaders, and enjoy a buffet lunch. -
WorkshopsCrops Day
Explore 2025 crop results, innovations, and agronomic research at Crops Day 2026 with Penn State Extension specialists. -
ArticlesPennsylvania Soil Quality Assessment Worksheet
This publication is intended to help agricultural producers, gardeners, and others assess the quality of their soil. -
ArticlesManaging Phosphorus for Crop Production
Phosphorus is a macronutrient and component of nucleic acids, and plays a vital role in plant reproduction, of which grain production is an important result. -
ArticlesManaging Potassium for Crop Production
A corn crop takes up nearly as much potassium (K) as it does nitrogen (N), yet management of each nutrient is entirely different. -
ArticlesA Nutrient Management Approach for Pennsylvania: Decision-Making
Effective nutrient management requires decisions to be made at several different levels of detail: strategic, tactical, and operational (Figure 1). -
ArticlesA Nutrient Management Approach for Pennsylvania: Exploring Performance Criteria
The focus of nutrient management is rapidly evolving from optimizing agronomic production and economic returns of crop production to balancing farm production with environmental protection. -
ArticlesA Nutrient Management Approach for Pennsylvania: Introduction to the Concepts
Nutrient management has taken on new meaning in recent times. Soil fertility traditionally dealt with supplying and managing nutrients to meet crop production requirements. -
ArticlesA Nutrient Management Approach for Pennsylvania: Plant Nutrient Stocks and Flows
Decision-making in agriculture affects the distribution of materials such as crops and manure within farms, and the movement of materials such as feeds and farm products to and from farms. -
ArticlesManaging Soil Health: Concepts and Practices
Information for farmers and gardeners who want to understand the physical, chemical, and biological components of healthy soil and how to manage them. -
Pennsylvania Nutrient Management Program
This program provides a comprehensive source of information about the Nutrient Management Act (Act 38, 2005), and associated technical guidance and educational information. -
Online Courses$99.00
Pennsylvania Certified Crop Adviser Study Guide
Sections 4Length 15 hoursStudy soil and water, and crop, pest, and nutrient management, the agronomy areas you are required to know for the Pennsylvania Certified Crop Adviser exam. -
ArticlesSoil Acidity and Aglime
Soil acidity is among the important environmental factors which can influence plant growth, and can seriously limit crop production. -
ArticlesNutrient Management Planning: An Overview
Nutrient management traditionally has been concerned with optimizing the economic returns from nutrients used to produce a crop. -
ArticlesManure Sampling for Nutrient Management Planning
Manure is an excellent source of many essential plant nutrients and, with proper management, can meet nearly all crop nutrient needs. -
ArticlesUsing Organic Nutrient Sources
This guide is intended to help growers interpret soil test recommendations for using organic nutrient sources. The information presented applies to both organic and conventional farms. -
ArticlesEarthworms
The burrowing and feeding activity of earthworms have numerous beneficial effects on overall soil quality for crop production. -
ArticlesLate Season Cornstalk Nitrate Test
Nitrogen (N) management is one of the most difficult decisions in corn production because of the many factors that influence nitrogen behavior, including materials, timing, and, especially, weather. -
ArticlesNutrient Budgets for PA Cropland: What They Reveal and How Can They Be Used?
Nutrient budgets have been developed by Mid-Atlantic Regional Water Program to quantify the magnitude and sources of excess nutrients that are being generated and applied throughout Pennsylvania. -
ArticlesThe Pennsylvania Phosphorus Index: Version 2
Gives descriptions of factors and how to determine them in developing a nitrogen-based nutrient management plan that will then be evaluated using the Phosphorus Index provided. -
ArticlesEffects of Soil Compaction
Soil compaction is the reduction of soil volume due to external factors; this reduction lowers soil productivity and environmental quality. -
ArticlesAvoiding Soil Compaction
The increasing size of farm equipment may cause significant soil compaction that can negatively affect soil productivity as well as environmental quality. -
ArticlesNitrogen Fertilization of Corn
Nitrogen (N), an element that literally surrounds us, changes in form and chemistry almost continuously and moves from one location to another without our notice. -
ArticlesPersistence of Herbicides in Soil
While it is desirable for the chemicals to control weeds during the season of application, it is not desirable for them to persist and affect subsequent crop growth. -
ArticlesStarter Fertilizer
Starter fertilizers enhance the development of emerging seedlings by supplying essential nutrients in accessible locations near the roots.

