4.5 Article

Effect of Different Organic Amendments on Actual and Achievable Yields in a Cereal-Based Cropping System

Journal

JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE AND PLANT NUTRITION
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 2122-2137

Publisher

SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s42729-023-01167-w

Keywords

Organic amendments; Plant nutrition; Winter wheat; Grain yield modelling; Linear plus exponential

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Soil fertility is threatened in intensive cropping systems without sufficient organic matter and excessive use of inorganic fertilisers. A long-term study found that the application of organic amendments, combined with lower rates of inorganic nitrogen fertiliser, significantly increased the crop yield of winter wheat. The use of organic amendments improved the maximum achievable yields compared to controls without amendments, leading to an average increase of 8.8% across four seasons. This highlights the importance of incorporating organic matter into soil management practices for sustainable agriculture.
Soil fertility is at risk in intensive cropping systems when using an exclusive regime of inorganic fertilisers without returning sufficient organic matter to the soil. Our objective was to evaluate the long-term effects of commonly used organic amendments interacting with different rates of inorganic nitrogen fertiliser on crop yields of winter wheat. Yield data from winter wheat were collected for five seasons between 2013 and 2019 from a continuous field trial based at Rothamsted Research, SE England. Organic amendments (anaerobic digestate, compost, farmyard manure, and straw at a rate of 0 and 2.5 ton C per hectare) and five rates of inorganic nitrogen fertiliser (NH4NO3 at 0, 80, 150, 190, 220 kg N ha(-1)) were applied to winter wheat grown in an arable rotation. At the same inorganic N rate, grain yields for the different organic amendment treatments (excluding the straw treatment) were statistically similar but significantly greater than the unamended control treatment. The nitrogen rate required for optimum yields tended to be lower in plots receiving a combination of organic amendments and mineral fertiliser. Based on the observed and modelled response functions, organic amendments excluding straw increased maximum achievable yields compared to non-amended controls. The size of the effect varied between seasons and amendments (+4.6 to +19.0% of the control yield), increasing the mean maximum achievable yield by 8.8% across four seasons. We conclude that the application of organic amendments can increase the yield potential in winter wheat substantially over what is achievable with inorganic fertiliser only.

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