4.7 Article

Rotating maize reduces the risk and rate of nitrate leaching

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/abef8f

Keywords

nitrate leaching; modelling; APSIM; crop rotation; yield-scaled leaching

Funding

  1. Iowa Nutrient Reduction Center
  2. Foundation for Food and Agricultural Research [534264]
  3. Iowa Crop Improvement Association, Iowa State University Plant Science Institute faculty scholar program
  4. NSF [1830478]
  5. USDA-NIFA Hatch project [IOW10480]
  6. National Science Foundation [DGE-1828942]

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There is a strong connection between nitrate leaching and nitrogen fertilizer input in annual crops. The study found that different cropping systems have varying responses to nitrogen fertilizer rates and NO3-N leaching loads. It was also discovered that rotating maize with soybean can reduce the impact of over-fertilization on NO3-N leaching compared to continuous maize.
There is a strong link between nitrate (NO3-N) leaching from fertilized annual crops and the rate of nitrogen (N) fertilizer input. However, this leaching-fertilizer relationship is poorly understood and the degree to which soil type, weather, and cropping system influence it is largely unknown. We calibrated the Agricultural Production Systems sIMulator process-based cropping system model using 56 site-years of data sourced from eight field studies across six states in the U.S. Midwest that monitored NO3-N leaching from artificial subsurface drainage in two cropping systems: continuous maize and two-year rotation of maize followed by unfertilized soybean (maize-soybean rotation). We then ran a factorial simulation experiment and fit statistical models to the leaching-fertilizer response. A bi-linear model provided the best fit to the relationship between N fertilizer rate (kg ha(-1)) and NO3-N leaching load (kg ha(-1)) (from one year of continuous maize or summed over the two-year maize-soybean rotation). We found that the cropping system dictated the slopes and breakpoint (the point at which the leaching rate changes) of the model, but the site and year determined the intercept i.e. the magnitude of the leaching. In both cropping systems, the rate of NO3-N leaching increased at an N fertilizer rate higher than the N rate needed to optimize the leaching load per kg grain produced. Above the model breakpoint, the rate of NO3-N leaching per kg N fertilizer input was 300% greater than the rate below the breakpoint in the two-year maize-soybean rotation and 650% greater in continuous maize. Moreover, the model breakpoint occurred at only 16% above the average agronomic optimum N rate (AONR) in continuous maize, but 66% above the AONR in the maize-soybean rotation. Rotating maize with soybean, therefore, allows for a greater environmental buffer than continuous maize with regard to the impact of overfertilization on NO3-N leaching.

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