4.5 Article

Nitrogen Use Efficiency and Crop Yield in Four Successive Crops Following Application of Biochar and Zeolites

Journal

JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE AND PLANT NUTRITION
Volume 21, Issue 2, Pages 1053-1065

Publisher

SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s42729-021-00421-3

Keywords

Soil conditioners; Zea mays; Avena sativa; Carbon sequestration; Crop nutritional indices; Soil properties

Funding

  1. Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT, Portugal)
  2. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) [UID/AGR/00690/2015]

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Biochar did not increase crop yield in the short term, but could increase soil organic carbon when combined with high nitrogen rates, maintaining both productivity and sustainability in the agro-system. Oats as a catch crop played an important role in reducing nitrate leaching and denitrification risk during winter.
Two soil amendments, biochar and zeolites, were evaluated in their potential for increasing crop productivity and agro-system sustainability. The effect of biochar and zeolites, in combination with four nitrogen (N) rates [0 (N0), 50 (N50), 100 (N100), and 200 (N200) kg ha(-1)], on crop yield, N use efficiency, and soil properties was evaluated in a cropping system of irrigated forage maize (Zea mays L.) grown in summer and oats (Avena sativa L.) grown in winter as a catch crop. Biochar increased soil organic carbon (C), pH, cation exchange capacity (CEC), and extractable phosphorus (P), but strongly reduced N recovery in the set of the four cropping cycles. In biochar-amended plots, N50 had a negative apparent N recovery (- 21%), indicating that less N was recovered by the plants than in the N0 treatment without biochar. Biochar reduced maize dry matter (DM) yield by 15.6% in comparison to the untreated control, indicating N immobilization by biochar at low N rates (N0 and N50). Zeolites did not influence crop productivity or soil properties, except for the increase in extractable K, probably the result of its initial K content. N application to maize significantly increased the productivity of both crops, including that of the non-fertilized oats. Under the conditions of this experiment, biochar and zeolites did not prove to be useful soil amendments to increase crop DM yield in the short-term. The use of biochar increased soil organic C, which associated to a high N rate can enable the dual objective of maintaining productivity and the sustainability of the agro-system. The results stressed also the important role of oats as a cover crop to reduce the risk of nitrate leaching and denitrification during winter.

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