4.7 Article

Long-term changes in soil chemical properties with cropland-to-orchard conversion on the Loess Plateau, China: Regulatory factors and relations with apple yield

Journal

AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS
Volume 204, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.agsy.2022.103562

Keywords

Apple orchards; Overfertilization; Soil chemical properties; Geostatistics; Soil degradation; Scenario analysis

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Farmland-to-apple orchard conversion is common in the Loess Plateau in China and in other developing countries, but overfertilization has become a major problem in apple orchards in the past two decades. This study aimed to quantify the changes in soil chemical properties and identify the factors affecting soil properties and their relationship with apple yields. It also provided early warnings by predicting the changes in soil properties under different fertilization scenarios. The results showed significant changes in soil properties and identified critical thresholds for maximum apple yield. Soil fertility and productivity in apple orchards can be improved by controlling overfertilization.
CONTEXT: Farmland-to-apple orchard conversion prevails on the Loess Plateau in China and in other developing countries, but simultaneously, apple orchards have been severely overfertilized in the past two decades.OBJECTIVE: We quantified the changes in soil chemical properties between the 1980s and 2010s, and identified environmental factors that controlled spatial variability of soil properties and relations with apple yields. In addition, early warnings were provided by forecasting the changes in soil properties to 2100 under various fertilization scenarios.METHODS: Geostatistics was performed using soil data obtained from the 1980s and 2010s to evaluate spatialtemporal variations in soil chemical properties. Drivers of the variation were identified by boosted regression tree analysis. Variance partitioning analysis and regression analysis were conducted to quantify the threshold values and then identify the potential factors limiting apple yield. Scenario analysis was conducted to forecast soil degradation, and thus, help to determine optimum fertilization.RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Soil properties, except pH, varied considerably in the 1980s and 2010s, with coefficients of variation between 22.55% and 60.62%. Compared with the 1980s, pH decreased in the 2010s, whereas concentrations of soil organic matter (SOM), total nitrogen (TN), available N (AN), available phosphorus (AP), and available potassium (AK) increased. Fertilization was the dominant factor affecting soil properties (except AP), followed by climate, terrain, and soil physical factors. Apple yield was significantly related to all properties, and critical thresholds were identified for pH, SOM, AN, AP, and AK to obtain maximum apple yield. In most apple orchards, pH, SOM, AP, and AK were much lower than corresponding thresholds, whereas AN exceeded the threshold. VPA identified soil as the most important factor explaining variation in apple yield, followed by anthropogenic, climatic, and topographic factors. Compared with an optimal fertilization scenario, continuing with conventional fertilization was predicted to lead to severe soil acidification and excessive accumulation of AN, AP, and AK in 2100. Thus, overfertilization must be controlled to improve apple orchard soil fertility and productivity. To summarize, soil chemical properties in apple orchards on the Loess Plateau changed substantially following long-term overfertilization, and soil acidification and low levels of SOM, AP, and properties to apple yields at a regional scale, and thus, contribute to optimizing orchard management in China and other countries with similar dilemmas in apple production systems.

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