Long-term Fate and Availability of Residual Fertilizer Nitrogen in Rice-Wheat Cropping System in Taihu Lake Region of China
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S143.1

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Supported by the Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (No. Y201956), the National Key R&D Program of China (No. 2017YFD0200104) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 30390080)

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    Abstract:

    Objective The high chemical nitrogen (N) fertilizer input in cropland soils of China has caused a large accumulation of residual fertilizer N in the soil in the current-season. This soil-residual fertilizer N can either be absorbed by subsequent season crops or lost to the environment through gaseous and hydrological pathways. The rice-wheat rotation is a dominant vital cropping system in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River agricultural region in China. However, the residual effects and fate of the soil-residual fertilizer N in this cropping system remain unclear.Method In this study, a 15N tracer long-term in-situ experiment was used to continuously monitor the fate and the residual effect of soil-residual fertilizer N in the following 17 years under non-fertilizer N application in a rice-wheat cropping system. The experiment had two N fertilizer treatments, with 100 (N100) and 250 (N250) kg·hm–2 of labelled urea (30 atom%) applied in the first wheat season, and no N fertilizer was added in the subsequent 17 years of the rice-wheat rotation.Result The results suggested that 34.5%-37.9% of the applied fertilizer N was taken up by the first wheat crop, and then the amount of residual N uptake by the rice and wheat decreased exponentially in the following rice-wheat rotation years. Over the following 17 years, 12.2%-15.8% of the applied fertilizer N was taken up by the subsequent crops (9.2%-11.8% for rice and 3.3%-4.0% for wheat), leading to the accumulative crop N recovery of 50.1%-50.3%, which was significantly higher than the in-season N use efficiency. We found that 22.9%-33.5% of the applied fertilizer N remained in the 0-20 cm soil after in-season wheat was harvested, which was then gradually decreased to 7.8%-9.8% after 17 years, but still accounted for 73.5%-78.5% of the total residual N in the 0-100 cm soil layer (9.9%-13.4%). The cumulative total loss of fertilizer N over the observation period estimated from the isotope mass balance was 36.3%-39.9%, which was close to the total loss of fertilizer N of 32.0%-39.2% calculated based on the N fertilizer use efficiency and the residual rate of 0-20 cm soil in the current season. The 15N abundance of crop grain, straw and soil all decayed exponentially with time during the observation period, which predicted that it would still take 28-37 years for the crop to decrease to the natural 15N abundance background value without N application.Conclusion Overall, fertilizer N losses in the rice-wheat cropping system mainly occurred in the current-season, and the residual effects of fertilizer N in soil lasted for a long time, but a negligible amount of this residual N can be lost to the environment. The keyways to optimal N fertilizer management in rice-wheat rotation are effectively reducing in-season fertilizer N losses and better utilizing soil-residual fertilizer N.

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WANG Yingying, XIA Longlong, CAI Siyuan, ZHAO Xu, YAN Xiaoyuan, XING Guangxi. Long-term Fate and Availability of Residual Fertilizer Nitrogen in Rice-Wheat Cropping System in Taihu Lake Region of China[J]. Acta Pedologica Sinica,2022,59(6):1626-1639.

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History
  • Received:March 18,2022
  • Revised:July 20,2022
  • Adopted:August 22,2022
  • Online: August 23,2022
  • Published: