“…Therefore, farmers who continue to grow winter wheat have a desire to mitigate yield losses and boost yields through a wide range of management tactics, if they are economical. Many different management tactics have been studied for their effects on wheat grain yield, including applications of N and P fertilizers (Knapp & Harms, 1988;Liu, Varsa, Kapusta, & Mburu, 1984;Nielsen & Halvorson, 1991;Mohammed, Chen, & Jensen, 2016;Russell, Guzman, & Mohammadi, 2020;Thapa, Chatterjee, Awale, McGranahan, & Daigh, 2016), seeding rates (Dai et al, 2013;Joseph, Alley, Brann, & Gravelle, 1985;Lloveras, Manent, Viudas, López, & Santiveri, 2004), plant growth regulators (Kleczewski & Whaley, 2018;Knapp, Harms, & Volenec, 1987;Knott, Van Sanford, Ritchey, & Swiggart, 2016;Swoish & Steinke, 2017;), micronutrient applications (Lu et al, 2012;Wang et al, 2015), and a combination of approaches (Jaenisch, de Oliveira Silva, DeWolf, Ruiz-Diaz, & Lollato, 2019;Quinn & Stienke, 2019;de Oliviera Silva et al, 2020). Nitrogen is often a limiting nutrient for wheat production, and exogenous application of N can increase tillering and grain yields in soft red and soft white winter wheat (de Oliveira Silva, Slafer, Fritz, & Lollato, 2020;Mohamed, Steiner, Wright, Bhangoo, & Millhouse, 1990;Quinn & Steinke, 2019;Russell et al, 2020).…”