| Literature DB >> 35406822 |
Hailun Du1, Jixiao Cui2, Yinan Xu1, Yingxing Zhao1, Lin Chen1, Zhejin Li1, Peng Sui1, Wangsheng Gao1, Yuanquan Chen1.
Abstract
Nitrogen-based pollution from agriculture has global environmental consequences. Excessive use of chemical nitrogen fertilizer, incorrect manure management and rural waste treatment are key contributors. Circular agriculture combining cropland and livestock is an efficient channel to reduce the use of chemical nitrogen fertilizers, promote the recycling of livestock manure, and reduce the global N surplus. The internal circulation of organic nitrogen resources in the cropland-livestock system can not only reduce the dependence on external synthetic nitrogen, but also reduce the environmental impacts of organic waste disposal. Therefore, this study tried to clarify the reactive nitrogen emissions of the crop-swine integrated system compared to the separated system from a life cycle perspective, and analyze the reasons for the differences in nitrogen footprints of the two systems. The results showed that the integrated crop production and swine production increased the grain yield by 14.38% than that of the separated system. The nitrogen footprints of crop production and swine production from the integrated system were 12.02% (per unit area) and 19.78% lower than that from the separated system, respectively. The total nitrogen footprint of the integrated system showed a reduction of 17.06%. The reduction was from simpler waste manure management and less agricultural inputs for both chemical fertilizer and raw material for forage processing. In conclusion, as a link between crop planting and pig breeding, the integrated system not only reduces the input of chemical fertilizers, but also promotes the utilization of manure, increases crop yield, and decreases environmental pollution. Integrated cropland and livestock is a promising model for agriculture green and sustainable development in China.Entities:
Keywords: North China Plain; crop-swine integrated system; nitrogen footprint; recycling agriculture; waste management
Year: 2022 PMID: 35406822 PMCID: PMC9002549 DOI: 10.3390/plants11070842
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1The system boundary of the separated system (SS). Notes: solid arrow denotes energy and material flow under agriculture practices, dotted arrow denotes reactive nitrogen emissions from agriculture.
Inputs and outputs for crop production, SS-C is the crop production system of separated system and IS-C is the crop production subsystem of integrated system.
| Item | SS-C | IS-C | Units | Emission Factor | Units |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inputs | |||||
| Wheat seed | 262.50 | 262.50 | kg ha−1 | 0.76 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Maize seed | 15.00 | 15.00 | kg ha−1 | 0.76 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| N | 274.63 | 75.00 | kg ha−1 | 39.82 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| P2O5 | 52.00 | 52.00 | kg ha−1 | 28.35 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| K2O | 248.00 | 248.00 | kg ha−1 | 8.32 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Bactericide | 2.63 | 2.63 | kg ha−1 | 3.53 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Insecticide | 1.35 | 1.35 | kg ha−1 | 3.53 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Herbicide | 1.50 | 1.50 | kg ha−1 | 4.49 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Diesel for tillage | 20.40 | 20.40 | kg ha−1 | 102.98 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Diesel for sowing | 15.00 | 15.00 | kg ha−1 | 102.98 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Diesel for harvesting | 9.75 | 9.75 | kg ha−1 | 102.98 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Diesel for manure management | 0.00 | 15.00 | kg ha−1 | 102.98 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Machinery for tillage | 40.80 | 40.80 | kg ha−1 | 104.30 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Machinery for sowing | 30.00 | 30.00 | kg ha−1 | 104.30 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Machinery for harvesting | 19.50 | 19.50 | kg ha−1 | 104.30 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Machinery for manure management | 0.00 | 30.00 | kg ha−1 | 104.30 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Electricity | 1087.50 | 1087.50 | Kwh ha−1 | 3.72 | g N-eq Kwh−1 |
| Outputs | |||||
| Wheat grain | 6381.09 ± 794.59 | 8165.96 ± 1193.56 | kg ha−1 | ||
| Maize grain | 11,082.77 ± 1066.06 | 11,808.46 ± 1015.62 | kg ha−1 |
Inputs and outputs for swine production, SS-P is the pig production system of separated system and IS-P is the pig production subsystem of integrated system.
| Items | SS-P | IS-P | Units | Emission Factor | Units |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Maize | 183.38 | 0.00 | kg head−1 | 0.76 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Soybean meal | 70.04 | 70.04 | kg head−1 | 0.76 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Wheat bran | 49.07 | 49.07 | kg head−1 | 0.76 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Compound forage | 315.98 | 315.98 | kg head−1 | 17.76 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Microelement | 14.16 | 14.16 | kg head−1 | 17.34 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Transportation | 200.00 | 200.00 | km | 2.57 | g N-eq t−1 km−1 |
| Electricity | 0.02 | 0.02 | kWh head−1 | 3.72 | g N-eq kWh−1 |
| Fossil fuel | 0.02 | 0.02 | kg head−1 | 102.98 | g N-eq kg−1 |
|
| |||||
| Water | 2634.26 | 2634.26 | kg head−1 | 2.60 × 10−4 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Concentrate feed | 19.49 | 19.49 | kg head−1 | 21.57 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Premixed feeds | 13.49 | 13.49 | kg head−1 | 17.76 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Electricity | 20.11 | 20.11 | kWh head−1 | 3.72 | g N-eq kWh−1 |
| Coal | 8.65 | 8.65 | kg head−1 | 2.70 × 10−3 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Vaccine | 37.11 | 37.11 | g head−1 | 80.35 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Disinfectant | 1542.03 | 1542.03 | g head−1 | 0.17 | g N-eq kg−1 |
| Veterinary medicine | 75.10 | 75.10 | g head−1 | 80.35 | g N-eq kg−1 |
|
| |||||
| Pork | 100 kg head−1 | ||||
| Urine | 314 kg head−1 | ||||
| Feces | 66.80 kg dry head−1 | ||||
Figure 2System boundary of the Crop-swine integrated system (IS). Notes: solid arrow denotes energy and material flows under agriculture practices, dotted arrow denotes reactive nitrogen emissions from agriculture.
NF of crop production subsystem. SS-C is the crop production of separated system, IS-C is the crop production of crop-swine integrated system.
| Item | Units | SS-C | IS-C | Statistical Analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wheat yield | kg ha−1 | 6381.09 ± 794.59 | 8165.96 ± 1193.56 | * |
| Maize yield | kg ha−1 | 11,082.77 ± 1066.06 | 11,808.46 ± 1015.62 | - |
| Total yield | kg ha−1 | 17,463.86 ± 1590.94 | 19,974.42 ± 1789.15 | * |
| Indirect NF | kg N ha−1 | 35.86 | 32.59 | |
| Direct NF | kg N ha−1 | 135.51 ± 32.11 | 118.19 ± 31.77 | - |
| including | ||||
| N2O | kg N ha−1 | 7.10 ± 3.17 | 3.77 ± 2.85 | - |
| NH3 | kg N ha−1 | 124.02 ± 29.98 | 104.00 ± 23.34 | - |
| NO3− | kg N ha−1 | 4.39 ± 0.14 | 10.42 ± 7.70 | - |
| NF per unit area | kg N-eq ha−1 | 171.37 | 150.77 | |
| NF per unit grain yield | kg N-eq t−1 | 98.13 | 75.48 |
Note: * represents a significant difference at the p = 0.05 level. -represents no significant difference at p = 0.05 level.
Figure 3NF of agricultural inputs for SS-C and IS-C. SS-C is the crop production of separated system, IS-C is the crop production of crop-swine integrated system.
NF of pig rearing system. SS-P is the pig rearing of separated system, IS-P is the pig rearing of integrated crop-swine system.
| Items | Units 37 Head Pigs−1 | SS-P | IS-P |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Maize | g N-eq | 5156.65 | 0.00 |
| Soybean meal | g N-eq | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Wheat bran | g N-eq | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Compound forage | g N-eq | 207,605.01 | 207,605.01 |
| Microelement | g N-eq | 9086.95 | 9086.95 |
| Transportation | g N-eq | 12,029.07 | 8542.21 |
| Electricity | g N-eq | 2.76 | 2.76 |
| Fossil fuel | g N-eq | 76.21 | 76.21 |
|
| |||
| Water | g N-eq | 25.36 | 25.36 |
| Concentrate feed | g N-eq | 15,552.57 | 15,552.57 |
| Premixed feeds | g N-eq | 8863.19 | 8863.19 |
| Electricity | g N-eq | 2771.49 | 2771.49 |
| Coal | g N-eq | 0.86 | 0.86 |
| Vaccine | g N-eq | 110.33 | 110.33 |
| Disinfectant | g N-eq | 9.98 | 9.98 |
| Veterinary medicine | g N-eq | 223.28 | 223.28 |
|
| g N-eq | 55,521.14 | 1468.11 |
|
| kg N-eq | 317.03 | 254.34 |
NF of the separated and integrated crop-swine system.
| Items | Units | SS | IS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crop Production | kg N-eq ha−1 | 171.37 | 150.77 |
| Forage processing | kg N-eq ha−1 | 233.96 | 225.31 |
| Pig rearing | kg N-eq ha−1 | 27.56 | 27.56 |
| Waste management | kg N-eq ha−1 | 55.52 | 1.47 |
| Total | kg N-eq ha−1 | 488.41 | 405.11 |