4.7 Article

Quantifying nitrogen loss hotspots and mitigation potential for individual fields in the US Corn Belt with a metamodeling approach

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac0d21

Keywords

nitrogen loss; mitigation potential; metamodel; sustainable agriculture; the Corn Belt

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation SitS program [2034385]
  2. Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E), U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AR0001227, DE-AR0001382]
  3. Directorate For Engineering
  4. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys [2034385] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study focuses on the excessive use of nitrogen fertilizer in the US Corn Belt region and its impacts on nitrogen emissions, soil organic carbon, and yield. By constructing metamodels, the researchers identified hotspots for mitigation and introduced net societal benefit as a comprehensive indicator to assess the trade-offs between social benefits and agricultural losses.
The high productivity in the US Corn Belt is largely enabled by the consumption of millions of tons of manufactured fertilizer. Excessive application of nitrogen (N) fertilizer has been pervasive in this region, and the unrecovered N eventually escaped from croplands in forms of nitrous oxide (N2O) emission and N leaching. Mitigating these negative impacts is hindered by a lack of practical information on where to focus and how much mitigation potential to expect. At a large scale, process-based crop models are the primary tools for predicting variables required by decision making, but their applications are prohibited by expensive computational and data storage costs. To overcome these challenges, we built a series of metamodels to learn the key mechanisms regarding the carbon (C) and N cycle from a well-validated process-based biogeochemical model, ecosys. The trained metamodel captures over 98% of the variability of the ecosys simulated outputs for 99 randomly selected counties in Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana. To identify hotspots with high mitigation potential, we introduce net societal benefit (NSB) as an indicator for synthesizing the loss in yield and social benefits through emissions and pollutants avoided. Our results show that reducing N fertilizer by 10% leads to 9.8% less N2O emissions and 9.6% less N leaching at the cost of 4.9% more SOC depletion and 0.6% yield reduction over the study region. The estimated total annual NSB is $395 M (uncertainty ranges from $114 M to $1271 M), including $334 from social benefits (uncertainty ranges from $46 M to $1076 M), $100 M from saving fertilizer (uncertainty ranges from $13 M to $455 M), and -$40 M due to yield changes (uncertainty ranges from -$261 M to $69 M). For the median scenario, we noted that 20% of the study area accounts for nearly 50% of the NSB, and thus represent hotspot locations for targeted mitigation. Although the uncertainty range suggests that developing such a high-resolution framework is not yet settled and the scenario based estimations are not appropriate to inform the management practices for individual farmers, our efforts shed light on the new generation of analytical tools for life cycle assessment.

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