Those amounts are most likely "per acre" recommendations. Fertilizer is sold mostly in bags with an analysis number, i.e. 10-10-10 or 20-10-20, which represents the percentage in each bag of each nutrient. If you buy a 50 lb. bag of 10-10-10 there are 5 lbs each of N (nitrogen), P (phosphorus), and K (potassium); the remainder of the bag are fillers and micronutrients. The fillers aid in even dispersion of the product. If we assume your plot is one acre and you need 87 lbs N, 43.5 lbs P, and 87 lbs K and you purchase a fertilizer with a 10-5-10 analysis in 50 lb bags then you'll need:
87 lbs N/(10% x 50 lbs)= about 18 bags
43.5 lbs N/(5% x 50 lbs)= about 18 bags
87 lbs N/(10% x 50 lbs)= about 18 bags
The actual calculations yield a slightly smaller, more precise number, but the small excess won't hurt anything. Keep in mind this is per acre, and the second year you will want to have another soil analysis to see where the first year fertilizer application/plant nutrient uptake ratio leaves your soil.
You didn't mention the pH level in the report. If the soil is acidic, an application of lime (available in bulk) can help minimize the need for chemical fertilizers by maintaining an optimum root environment for NPK (also FE++, MG++, CA++, and other trace elements) uptake.
Your county extension service will be happy to assist you with this; those guys and gals are usually looking for customers to help justify their jobs since there are so few farms these days.
PH