Productivity, 15 N dynamics and water use efficiency in low‐ and high‐input switchgrass systems
Sustainable and environmentally benign switchgrass production systems need to be developed for switchgrass to become a large‐scale dedicated energy crop. An experiment was conducted in C alifornia from 2009 to 2011 to determine the sustainability of low‐ and high‐input irrigated switchgrass systems...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Global change biology. Bioenergy 2014-11, Vol.6 (6), p.704-716 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Sustainable and environmentally benign switchgrass production systems need to be developed for switchgrass to become a large‐scale dedicated energy crop. An experiment was conducted in
C
alifornia from 2009 to 2011 to determine the sustainability of low‐ and high‐input irrigated switchgrass systems as a function of yield, irrigation requirement, crop N removal, N translocation from aboveground (
AG
) to belowground (
BG
) biomass during senescence, and fertilizer
15
N recovery (
FNR
) in the
AG
and
BG
biomass (0–300 cm), and soil (0–300 cm). The low‐input system consisted of a single‐harvest (mid‐fall) irrigated until flowering (early summer), while the high‐input system consisted of a two‐harvest system (early summer and mid‐fall) irrigated throughout the growing season. Three N fertilization rates (0, 100, and 200 kg N ha
−1
yr
−1
) were applied as subtreatments in a single application in the spring of each year. A single pulse of
15
N enriched fertilizer was applied in the first year of the study to micro‐plots within the 100 kg N ha
−1
subplots. Average yields across years under optimal N rates (100 and 200 kg ha
−1
yr
−1
for low‐ and high‐input systems, respectively) were 20.7 and 24.8 Mg ha
−1
. However, the low input (372 ha mm) required 47% less irrigation than the high‐input system (705 ha mm) and achieved higher irrigation use efficiency. In addition, the low‐input system had 46% lower crop N removal, 53% higher N stored in BG biomass, and a positive N balance, presumably due to 49% of
15
N translocation from
AG
to
BG
biomass during senescence. Furthermore, at the end of 3 years, the low‐input system had lower fertilizer
15
N removed by harvest (26%) and higher
FNR
remaining in the system in BG biomass plus soil (31%) than the high‐input system (45% and 21%, respectively). Based on these findings, low‐input systems are more sustainable than high‐input systems in irrigated
M
editerranean climates. |
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ISSN: | 1757-1693 1757-1707 |
DOI: | 10.1111/gcbb.12104 |