| Literature DB >> 25186728 |
Xinping Chen1, Zhenling Cui1, Mingsheng Fan2, Peter Vitousek3, Ming Zhao4, Wenqi Ma5, Zhenlin Wang6, Weijian Zhang4, Xiaoyuan Yan7, Jianchang Yang8, Xiping Deng9, Qiang Gao10, Qiang Zhang11, Shiwei Guo12, Jun Ren13, Shiqing Li9, Youliang Ye14, Zhaohui Wang15, Jianliang Huang16, Qiyuan Tang17, Yixiang Sun18, Xianlong Peng19, Jiwang Zhang6, Mingrong He6, Yunji Zhu14, Jiquan Xue15, Guiliang Wang2, Liang Wu2, Ning An2, Liangquan Wu2, Lin Ma2, Weifeng Zhang2, Fusuo Zhang2.
Abstract
Agriculture faces great challenges to ensure global food security by increasing yields while reducing environmental costs. Here we address this challenge by conducting a total of 153 site-year field experiments covering the main agro-ecological areas for rice, wheat and maize production in China. A set of integrated soil-crop system management practices based on a modern understanding of crop ecophysiology and soil biogeochemistry increases average yields for rice, wheat and maize from 7.2 million grams per hectare (Mg ha(-1)), 7.2 Mg ha(-1) and 10.5 Mg ha(-1) to 8.5 Mg ha(-1), 8.9 Mg ha(-1) and 14.2 Mg ha(-1), respectively, without any increase in nitrogen fertilizer. Model simulation and life-cycle assessment show that reactive nitrogen losses and greenhouse gas emissions are reduced substantially by integrated soil-crop system management. If farmers in China could achieve average grain yields equivalent to 80% of this treatment by 2030, over the same planting area as in 2012, total production of rice, wheat and maize in China would be more than enough to meet the demand for direct human consumption and a substantially increased demand for animal feed, while decreasing the environmental costs of intensive agriculture.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25186728 DOI: 10.1038/nature13609
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962