4.7 Article

Nitrogen and Phosphorus Replacement Value of Three Representative Livestock Manures Applied to Summer Maize in the North China Plain

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy12112716

Keywords

livestock manure; nitrogen; phosphorus; fertilizer replacement value

Funding

  1. China Agriculture Research System [CARS-03]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFD0200402]

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This study investigated the optimal utilization of livestock manure in comparison to mineral fertilizers for nitrogen and phosphorus availability. Livestock manure showed higher efficiency at low application rates, with pig manure having the highest nitrogen availability and cattle manure having the highest phosphorus availability.
Land application of livestock manure may reduce the use of mineral fertilizers and alleviate the environmental degradation associated with mineral fertilizers application. However, how to optimize utilization of livestock manure value is not well understood and documentation regarding the nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) fertilizer replacement values (NFRV and PFRV, respectively) needs further scrutiny. Therefore, three representative livestock manures, i.e., pig, chicken, and cattle manure, were applied at different usages to assess their N and P availability in comparison to reference mineral fertilizers over summer maize growing seasons. The results show that the average NFRVs of pig, chicken, and cattle manures were 41.7-58.4%, 27.5-44.4%, and -3.6-36.1%, respectively, when based on different references (grain yield, total dry matter yield, grain N uptake, total N uptake), at different N application levels. The NFRV increased with the elevated N application rate for cattle manure treatment. In the P trials, livestock manure had a higher PFRV at a low P application level, and the average PFRVs of pig, chicken, and cattle manures were 80.3-164.8%, 77.9-143.7%, and 94.1-168.0%, respectively, at different P application levels. We conclude that livestock manure produced the lowest NFRV and highest PFRV at a low fertilizer application rate; pig manure had the highest N availability; and cattle manure had the highest P availability.

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