| Literature DB >> 34256283 |
Jun Qiao1, Dong Zhao2, Wei Zhou3, Tingmei Yan4, Linzhang Yang5.
Abstract
Pollution from the paddy fields has posed a threat to surface water quality, and the reactive N in runoff has been recognized as the dominant contributor. In the rice-wheat systems of eastern China, replacing wheat (Triticum aestivum) with Chinese milk vetch (CMV) (Astragalus sinicus) is known to reduce total fertilizer N use and associated N losses during winter; however, the function of the rice-CMV system in controlling the N runoff loss was overlooked during the summer rice-growing season. Over 6 years, we monitored soil mineral N, plant N accumulation, rice grain yield, N agronomic efficiency (AEN), and N runoff in rice-CMV fertilizer N rate-response experiments and made comparisons with the conventional N inputs in rice-wheat rotation. Aboveground CMV residues added 65-116 kg N ha-1 yr-1; therefore, by adjusting the fertilizer time, the rice in this system required 44-56% less N fertilizer to produce rice yields equivalent to the 270 kg N ha-1 (district average, C270) used in the rice-wheat system. In all fertilizer N application treatments, 120 kg ha-1 seemed to be the threshold that ensured the soil N supply, the N accumulation at rice critical stages, and consequently, the current level rice yield. The corresponding runoff N averaged 9.3 kg ha-1 season-1, which was 51.8% less than that in C270 (19.3 kg ha-1 season-1). Cumulative N runoff (total N and NH4+-N) correlated strongly with fertilizer N input for any single year (sample size = 108, P < 0.01). Application of 30-120 kg fertilizer N ha-1 gave an equivalent AEN, which indicated that the integration of CMV and fertilizer N could increase the agronomic efficiency of N fertilizer applied to the rice. Rotating paddy rice with CMV instead of wheat, together with the suitable adjustment of N fertilizer, could sustain rice yield and gain the utmost environmental benefits from rice-based agroecosystems.Entities:
Keywords: Environmental sustainability; Green manure; N gradient; N runoff losses; Paddy rice
Year: 2021 PMID: 34256283 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117722
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071