4.6 Article

Replacing Mineral Fertilisers for Bio-Based Fertilisers in Potato Growing on Sandy Soil: A Case Study

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app12010341

Keywords

agricultural circularity; sustainable agriculture; environmental impact; manure processing; GHG emissions; fertiliser replacement value

Funding

  1. Nutri2Cycle project

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This study analyzes the environmental and agronomic effects of different bio-based fertilisers (BBFs) on potato growing in sandy soil. The study finds that the refinement level of BBFs influences nitrogen release rate, greenhouse gas emissions, and nutrient fertiliser replacement value. However, there is no significant difference in potato yield between BBFs and mineral fertilisers. Promoting the adoption of BBFs requires solving practical issues, ensuring legal substitution of mineral fertilisers, and reducing the surplus of slurry manure.
Featured Application Use bio-based fertilisers as a replacement for mineral fertiliser or slurry manure. The refinement level of bio-based fertilisers (BBFs) can influence environmental and agronomic performance. This study analyses the environmental and agronomic effect of different BBFs on potato growing in sandy soil. A less refined product (liquid fraction of digestate (LFD)), two refined products (ammonium sulphate (AS) and potassium concentrate (KC)), and mineral fertilizer (MF) are compared by conducting: (i) a nitrogen (N) incubation experiment where the N release rate of the BBFs is determined, (ii) a greenhouse gas emission experiment where N2O, CO2, and CH4 emissions after BBF application are measured, (iii) a pot experiment where the nutrient fertiliser replacement value (NFRV) of the BBF is calculated, and (iv) a full-scale field trial where the potato quality and quantity and the remaining N residues in the soil after harvest are assessed. The N release rate and the NFRV of AS (142 +/- 19% and 1.13, respectively) was higher compared with the LFD (113 +/- 24% and 1.04) and MF (105 +/- 16% and 1.00). Lowest N2O emissions were observed after the application of the less refined product (0.02 +/- 0.01 per 100 g N applied) and highest for MF urea (0.11 +/- 0.02 per 100 g N applied). In the full-scale field trial, no significant difference in potato yield was observed in the plots that received manure in combination with BBF or MF. This study showed that all three BBFs can safely be used in potato growing on sandy soils. However, the adoption of BBFs can be stimulated by (i) solving the practical issues that occurred during the application of LFD, (ii) making sure BBFs are on the list of RENURE materials so they can legally replace mineral fertiliser, and (iii) reducing the surplus of slurry manure to stimulate the use and fair pricing of BBF products.

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