| Literature DB >> 32753694 |
Lunjing Du1, Qiang Li2, Lan Li3, Yawei Wu1, Fang Zhou1, Binxiang Liu1, Bo Zhao1, Xiaolong Li1, Qinlin Liu1, Fanlei Kong1, Jichao Yuan4.
Abstract
There is an urgent need for suitable nitrogen nutrition models for Southwest China, which take into account nutritional differences at the cultivar level, to provide scientific guidance for cultivar-specific fertilizer applications during maize production. In this study, the nitrogen-efficient maize cultivar Zhenghong 311 and the nitrogen-inefficient maize cultivar Xianyu 508 were used in a three-year field experiment and a 2-year field pot experiment with nitrogen application rates ranging from 0 to 450 kg·hm-2 to construct a critical nitrogen dilution curve model for each maize cultivar. The usefulness of this model to diagnose nitrogen status and evaluate maize fertilization needs was subsequently analyzed. We found that the critical nitrogen concentration in maize aboveground tissues was a power function of the biomass, described by the equations Nc = 26.126 W-0.292 and Nc = 25.826 W-0.302 for ZH 311 and XY 508 cultivars, respectively. The fitting degree of these equations was significant or highly significant, demonstrating the suitability of these models to diagnose N deficiency and fertilization needs in maize plants grown in the hilly areas of central Sichuan. A very significant linear positive correlation between the nitrogen nutrient index (NNI) and nitrogen concentration in the aboveground tissues was detected. Based on this, we calculated the nitrogen concentration (Nt) for an NNI equal to 1 at different maize growth stages in both cultivars and observed that the Nt value can be used as a reference index for nitrogen nutrition diagnosis. Additionally, we found a highly significant quadratic convex function relationship between the NNI (y) and the nitrogen fertilizer level (x). The following regression equations were derived for these maize cultivars with the data obtained from each growth period along five consecutive years (2011-2015): yZH 311 = - 0.000005x2 + 0.003074x + 0.553206 (R2 = 0.5432**) and yXY 508 = - 0.000004x2 + 0.002914x + 0.512555 (R2 = 0.6279**). For an NNI value equal to 1, the nitrogen application level required was 224.07 kg·hm-2 for ZH 311 and 283.01 kg·hm-2 for XY 508, indicating that the suitable application rate for the nitrogen-efficient cultivar is lower than that for the nitrogen-inefficient cultivar. Our experimental data reinforce the concept that selecting nitrogen-efficient maize cultivars is an effective technical measure to reduce nitrogen input needs and increase nitrogen use efficiency during maize production.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32753694 PMCID: PMC7403409 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-70065-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Meteorological data during spring maize growth period in Sichuan (2014–2015).
Soil basic fertility in 2014 and 2015.
| Years | 2011–2013 | 2014 | 2015 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Organic matter (g·kg−1) | 16.60 | 15.75 | 15.30 |
| Total N (g·kg−1) | 1.24 | 1.75 | 1.56 |
| Total P (g·kg−1) | 0.73 | 0.57 | 0.40 |
| Total K (g·kg−1) | 12.54 | 12.61 | 8.25 |
| Alkali hydrolysable N (mg·kg−1) | 25.22 | 39.26 | 36.34 |
| Olsen-P (mg·kg−1) | 13.54 | 2.55 | 2.27 |
| Exchangeable K (mg·kg−1) | 138.75 | 139.33 | 128.50 |
| pH | 8.63 | 7.59 | 8.16 |
Effect of nitrogen application rate on dry matter accumulation in spring maize (t·hm-2).
| Cultivar | Nitrogen | Jointing stage | Bell-mouth stage | Silking stage | Filling stage | Maturity stage | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | 2015 | 2014 | 2015 | 2014 | 2015 | 2014 | 2015 | 2014 | 2015 | ||
| ZH 311 | N0 | 0.33 d | 0.19 e | 0.95 d | 0.77 f | 1.71 d | 1.42 f | 2.66 d | 2.31 e | 4.40 e | 2.67 f |
| N150 | 0.70 b | 0.82 bc | 2.76 b | 2.45 c | 4.73 b | 4.83 d | 7.55 b | 8.12 c | 12.73 b | 10.72 c | |
| N 300 | 0.80 a | 0.95 a | 3.41 a | 3.00 a | 5.58 a | 6.02 a | 8.69 a | 9.85 a | 14.19 a | 12.09 a | |
| N 450 | – | 0.81 c | – | 2.66 b | – | 5.68 b | – | 9.17 b | – | 11.43 b | |
| XY 508 | N 0 | 0.29 d | 0.17 e | 0.80 d | 0.59 g | 1.21 e | 0.80 g | 1.90 e | 1.65 f | 3.17 f | 1.85 g |
| N 150 | 0.58 c | 0.76 d | 2.36 c | 2.01 e | 4.13 c | 4.31 e | 6.81 c | 6.89 d | 8.64 d | 8.13 e | |
| N 300 | 0.63 c | 0.81 b | 2.44 c | 2.41 cd | 4.35 bc | 5.00 c | 7.02 c | 8.31 c | 10.28 c | 10.28 cd | |
| N 450 | – | 0.78 c | – | 2.31 d | – | 5.10 c | – | 8.12 c | – | 9.75 d | |
| F value | Cultivar | 44.46** | 49.44** | 81.68** | 173.67** | 46.43** | 797.95** | 74.42** | 535.47** | 279.23** | 125.68** |
| Nitrogen | 230.78** | 2,677.77** | 518.58** | 965.93** | 365.81** | 7,318.08** | 820.33** | 4,595.27** | 795.37** | 723.05** | |
| Cultivar × Nitrogen | 5.24* | 14.24** | 19.06** | 8.04** | 4.06* | 22.36** | 6.15* | 14.67** | 25.17** | 5.59** | |
Different lowercase and uppercase letters denote significant differences at 0.05 and 0.01 levels, respectively; * and ** indicate significant difference or correlation at 0.05 and 0.01 levels, respectively.
Effect of nitrogen application rate on nitrogen accumulation in spring maize (kg·hm−2).
| Cultivar | Nitrogen | Jointing stage | Bell-mouth stage | Silking stage | Filling stage | Maturity stage | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | 2015 | 2014 | 2015 | 2014 | 2015 | 2014 | 2015 | 2014 | 2015 | ||
| ZH 311 | N 0 | 4.51d | 2.27e | 8.10 e | 10.02f. | 19.02 d | 14.07 g | 24.30e | 19.89 g | 32.79d | 21.96 g |
| N150 | 23.60 b | 26.20 c | 47.06c | 31.96d | 72.32 c | 66.60e | 90.36c | 86.51e | 108.92b | 100.00e | |
| N 300 | 27.75a | 32.10 a | 70.54a | 56.45a | 116.86 a | 100.64a | 119.74a | 119.17a | 140.27a | 133.01a | |
| N 450 | – | 27.18b | – | 46.68b | – | 92.76b | – | 114.76b | – | 127.34b | |
| Av | |||||||||||
| XY 508 | N 0 | 4.16d | 2.66e | 5.89f. | 7.00 g | 11.78 e | 7.90 h | 15.36f. | 13.11 h | 21.00e | 15.15 h |
| N 150 | 20.60 c | 22.79d | 43.91d | 24.66e | 67.27 c | 55.04f. | 81.94d | 70.33f. | 86.96c | 75.68f. | |
| N 300 | 23.35b | 27.36b | 51.16b | 41.33c | 92.06 b | 79.87d | 98.07b | 96.48d | 112.05b | 106.65d | |
| N 450 | – | 25.98c | – | 45.71b | – | 88.17c | – | 104.42c | – | 118.60c | |
| Av | |||||||||||
| F value | Cultivar (C) | 153.89** | 417.81** | 302.12** | 473.21* | 84.43** | 739.70** | 150.09** | 276.71** | 508.66** | 276.85** |
| Nitrogen (N) | 3,981.19** | 12,871.84** | 4,553.85** | 3,796.08** | 1,484.18** | 8,935.41** | 2,530.53** | 2,669.12** | 4,159.34** | 2,375.17** | |
| C × N | 32.53** | 108.68** | 137.86** | 106.44** | 21.58** | 84.86** | 16.64** | 17.19** | 27.33** | 26.29** | |
Different lowercase and uppercase letters denote significant differences at 0.05 and 0.01 levels, respectively; * and ** indicate significant difference or correlation at 0.05 and 0.01 levels, respectively.
Figure 2Critical nitrogen concentration dilution curve for spring maize in Sichuan.
Figure 3Nitrogen nutrition index (NNI) of spring maize subjected to different N treatments in Sichuan. (a: 2013; b: 2014).
Figure 4Relationship between NNI and nitrogen application in spring maize in Sichuan, 2011–2015.
Relationship between NNI and Na in spring maize grown in Sichuan, 2011–2015.
| Cultivar | Stages | Equation parameters | Nt (NNI = 1) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a | b | P | ||||
| ZH 311 | Jointing stage | 1.8593 | 26.3535 | 0.9896 | 0.0001 | 28.2128 |
| Bell-mouth stage | 4.9209 | 13.9771 | 0.9597 | 0.0001 | 18.8980 | |
| Silking stage | 3.6424 | 12.2915 | 0.9193 | 0.0001 | 15.9339 | |
| Filling stage | 4.9811 | 8.3991 | 0.9502 | 0.0002 | 13.3802 | |
| Maturity stage | 2.7534 | 9.3924 | 0.8884 | 0.0001 | 12.1458 | |
| XY 508 | Jointing stage | 1.6204 | 27.4420 | 0.9784 | 0.0001 | 29.0624 |
| Bell-mouth stage | 4.0430 | 15.5895 | 0.9636 | 0.0001 | 19.6325 | |
| Silking stage | 4.7279 | 11.7615 | 0.8686 | 0.0001 | 16.4894 | |
| Filling stage | 4.6722 | 8.6847 | 0.9652 | 0.0001 | 13.3569 | |
| Maturity stage | 3.1772 | 9.3720 | 0.8762 | 0.0001 | 12.5492 | |