In a Nutshell
- Corteva’s Utrisha N is an organic certified fertilizer amendment product that contains N-fixing bacteria and is marketed as increasing nitrogen supply to crops.
- Three PFI cooperators (two organic, one conventional) performed replicated strip trials testing whether adding Utrisha N to their typical fertilizer program provided any yield benefits.
Key Findings
- Cooperators found no significant corn yield impacts from the use of Utrisha N in three trials in organic fields and one trial in a conventionally managed field.
- Cooperators found that applying this product was a bit challenging and costly due to the need to apply it in a separate pass from other management operations.
Background
Soils and the environment naturally contain a variety of bacteria which fix nitrogen from the atmosphere. In recent years, a variety of agricultural products containing N-fixing bacteria and marketed as supplements to N fertilizers have come on the market.
The idea is that the bacteria in these products colonize soil, crop roots, and/or crop leaves and perform N fixation beyond what the microbes existing in the environment would perform. This extra N fixation could provide more N to a crop, improving yields and allowing for fertilizer application reductions [1].
While manufacturers of these products routinely claim yield increases at a given N fertilization rate with use of their products, independent academic research throughout the North Central US has shown that there are rarely corn or other crop yield responses to a variety of these products [2].
However, most existing independent studies on this topic are in conventionally managed systems, and there is very limited information available on the effectiveness of these products on organically managed systems. Because N is a major limiting nutrient on many organic farms and organic row-crop farmers have limited options for N fertilization strategies, biological N-fixing products could be a useful addition to their fertilizer options if they work [3].
One biological N-fixing product, Corteva’s Utrisha N, is designed to be foliar applied to a wide variety of crops including corn and is certified organic by OMRI. This piqued the interest of several cooperators with organic and conventional operations who wondered if Utrisha N could alleviate N limitation, increase yields and drive financial returns on their farms.

Methods
DesignTo determine the value of Utrisha N, the cooperators compared corn yields under the following treatments:
- Control: Cooperator’s typical practice rate of manure/fertilizer applied.
- Utrisha N: Cooperator’s typical practice rate of manure/fertilizer applied. Utrisha N foliar applied at V4-V8 corn stage. Cooperators randomly assigned four replications of each treatment in pairs for a total of eight treatment strips. Field management practices for each cooperator/field are detailed in Table 1.

Results and Discussion
There were no significant differences in corn yield between control and Utrisha treatments across any of the farms (Table 2). Shriver reflected that “Even though the Utrisha seemed to make no difference, I believe the trial was accurate and therefore gave us usable results.”

Conclusions and Next Steps
Utrisha N applied at V7-V8 stage corn in these four mid-to-high yielding fields did not increase corn yield. The cooperators who trialed Utrisha N this year are not planning to try this particular product again, but some may try other biologicals in the future. Though costly and often tricky to apply, many farmers view these products as worth trialing, especially in organic contexts or contexts where they are hoping to reduce synthetic N inputs. PFI will continue to support cooperators who are interested in trialing biological amendments.
Appendix – Trial Design and Weather Conditions


References
[1] L. Reed and B. R. Glick, “The Recent Use of Plant-Growth-Promoting Bacteria to Promote the Growth of Agricultural Food Crops,” Agriculture, vol. 13, no. 5, Art. no. 5, May 2023, doi: 10.3390/agriculture13051089. [2] D. Franzen and et al., “Performance of Selected Commercially Available Asymbiotic N-fixing Products in the North Central Region,” N. D. State Univ. Ext., vol. SF2080, Apr. 2023, [Online]. Available: https://www.ndsu.edu/fileadmin/snrs/Files/SF2080_Performance_of_Selected_N-fixing_Products.pdf [3] H. Valenzuela, “Ecological Management of the Nitrogen Cycle in Organic Farms,” Nitrogen, vol. 4, no. 1, Art. no. 1, Mar. 2023, doi: 10.3390/nitrogen4010006. [4] “Biological Soil Amendments,” Practical Farmers of Iowa. Accessed: Jan. 03, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://practicalfarmers.org/research/biological-soil-amendments/ [5] S. Gailans and J. Boyer, “MycoApply Soil Inoculant for Corn and Soybeans.” Practical Farmers of Iowa, Dec. 04, 2019. Accessed: Jul. 24, 2023. [Online]. Available: https://practicalfarmers.org/research/mycoapply-soil-inoculant-for-corn-and-soybeans/ [6] “Utrisha N Nutrient Efficiency Optimizer Application in Corn.” Corteva Agriscience. Accessed: Jan. 02, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://www.corteva.us/content/dam/dpagco/corteva/na/us/en/files/product-page-resources/utrisha-n/DOC-Utrisha-N-Fact-Sheet-Corn.pdf [7] Climodat Reports, “Iowa Environmental Mesonet.” Iowa State University. Accessed: Jan. 2, 2023. [Online]. Available: http://mesonet.agron.iastate.edu/climodat/





