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Fate of N-labelled urea as affected by long-term manure substitution. | LitMetric

Fate of N-labelled urea as affected by long-term manure substitution.

Sci Total Environ

State Key Laboratory of Efficient Utilization of Arid and Semi-arid Arable Land in Northern China, Key Laboratory of Non-point Source Pollution Control, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Changping Soil Quality National Observation and Research Station, Institute of Agricultural Resources and Regional Planning, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing 100081, PR China.

Published: October 2023

Quantifying the fate of fertilizer nitrogen (N) is essential to develop more sustainable agricultural fertilization practices. However, the fate of chemical fertilizer N, particularly in long-term manure substitution treatment regimes, is not fully understood. The present study aimed to investigate the fate of N-labelled urea in a chemical fertilizer treatment (CF, 240 kg N ha) and N manure 50 % substitution treatment (1/2N + M, 120 kg N ha + 120 kg manure N ha) in two continuous crop seasons, based on a 10-year long-term experiment in the North China Plain (NCP). The results showed that manure substitution greatly enhanced N use efficiency (NUE) (39.9 % vs. 31.3 %) and suppressed N loss (6.9 % vs. 7.5 %) compared with the CF treatment in the first crop. However, the NO emissions factor in the 1/2N + M treatment was increased by 0.1 % (0.5 kg N ha for CF vs. 0.4 kg N ha for 1/2N + M) compared with the CF treatment, although N leaching and NH volatilization rates decreased by 0.2 % (10.8 kg N ha for CF vs. 5.1 kg N ha for 1/2N + M) and 0.5 % (6.6 kg N ha for CF vs. 2.8 kg N ha for 1/2N + M), respectively. In which, only NH volatilization presented significantly difference between treatments. It is important to note that in the second crop, the residual N in soil (0-20 cm) remained mostly in the soil for the CF (79.1 %) and the 1/2N + M treatment (85.3 %), and contributed less to crop N uptake (3.3 % vs. 0.8 %) and leached losses (2.2 % vs. 0.6 %). This proved that manure substitution could enhance the stabilization of chemical N. These results suggested that long-term manure substitution effectively increases NUE, suppresses N loss, and improves N stabilization in soil, but negative impacts such as NO emissions due to climate change should be investigated further.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.164924DOI Listing

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