Fate of urea- 15 N as influenced by different irrigation modes

Fertilizer nitrogen (N) is a main pollutant in the agricultural ecosystem, while the fate of fertilizer N influenced by different irrigation modes is not well comparatively investigated. In this study, the distribution of fertilizer N in soil layers and tomato organs as well as its loss under drip,...

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Veröffentlicht in:RSC advances 2020-03, Vol.10 (19), p.11317-11324
Hauptverfasser: Ru, Xu, Jingnan, Chen, Zhiyuan, Lin, Xieyong, Chen, Maomao, Hou, Shanshan, Shen, Qiu, Jin, Fenglin, Zhong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Fertilizer nitrogen (N) is a main pollutant in the agricultural ecosystem, while the fate of fertilizer N influenced by different irrigation modes is not well comparatively investigated. In this study, the distribution of fertilizer N in soil layers and tomato organs as well as its loss under drip, spray and flood irrigation with different quotas of 140, 180 and 220 m ha were evaluated quantitatively by using nitrogen-15 ( N) labeled urea (abundance of 19.6%) as fertilizer source. The results showed that the plant N, soil N and N loss accounted for 27.9-47.8%, 38.8-54.0% and 10.3-21.9% of the total applied N, respectively. The amount of N absorbed by plants was significantly ( < 0.05) higher under drip and spray irrigation in comparison to flood irrigation with the same irrigation quota. The maximum N use efficiency and the minimum N residual were detected under drip irrigation with quota of 180 m ha , indicating that the supply and demand of urea- N was more synchronized under such an irrigation mode. The N loss increased obviously as irrigation quota increased. Moreover, the correlation analysis between N loss and the possible impact factors indicated that the soil mineral N content after irrigation was one important factor influencing the N loss. Among the three irrigation modes, spray irrigation caused the lowest N loss of 10.3-13.1% when using the same irrigation quota. It was concluded that the irrigation modes have profound impacts on the fate of urea- N. Irrigation could be used as a regulation pathway of plant N absorption and agricultural N output.
ISSN:2046-2069
2046-2069
DOI:10.1039/D0RA00002G