Crop residue and fertiliser N effects on nitrogen fixation and yields of legume–cereal rotations and soil organic fertility
Improved management of nitrogen (N) in low N soils is critical for increased land productivity and economic sustainability. We report results of a rainfed rotation experiment, conducted in the Northwest Frontier Province (NWFP), Pakistan, during 1995–1999 to evaluate effects of residue retention and...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Field crops research 2003-06, Vol.83 (1), p.1-11 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Improved management of nitrogen (N) in low N soils is critical for increased land productivity and economic sustainability. We report results of a rainfed rotation experiment, conducted in the Northwest Frontier Province (NWFP), Pakistan, during 1995–1999 to evaluate effects of residue retention and fertiliser N on N
2 fixation inputs and yields of a mungbean (
Vigna radiata)–wheat (
Triticum aestivum) sequence, and a lentil (
Lens culinaris)–summer cereal sequence. Mungbean and sorghum (
Sorghum bicolor) or maize (
Zea mays) were grown in the summers and lentil and wheat in the winters. Immediately after grain harvest, above-ground residues of all crops were either completely removed (−residue), or chopped into 5–20
cm pieces, spread across the plots and incorporated by chisel plough (+residue). Fertiliser N rates were nil or 120
kg
N/ha for wheat and nil or 150
kg
N/ha for sorghum/maize. The percentage of mungbean N derived from N
2 fixation (%Ndfa) ranged from 47% to almost 100% (mean of 75%). On average, mungbean fixed 112
kg
N/ha (+residues) and 74
kg
N/ha (−residues), with N balances of +64
kg
N/ha (+residues) and +9
kg
N/ha (−residues). Lentil %Ndfa ranged from 50 to 87% (mean of 73%). Values for crop N fixed were 42–85
kg
N/ha, with a mean of 68
kg
N/ha. Average N balances for lentil were +27
kg
N/ha (+residues) and +16
kg
N/ha (−residues). Grain yields of the 0N wheat responded to the previous mungbean (36% increase over the 0N sorghum), but showed an even greater response to fertiliser N applied to the previous sorghum (150% increase). Highest yields were recorded for the N-fertilised wheat (average of 2.27
t/ha). Shoot biomass yields of the 0N sorghum and maize responded strongly to the previous lentil crop (49% average increase over the 0N wheat) and fertiliser N, applied either to the crop itself (140%) or to the previous wheat crop (32%). Residue retention increased shoot biomass yields of both the summer (average of 20%) and winter crops (average of 9%). Grain yield benefits of residues were 13% for mungbean, and 8% for wheat and lentil. Soil organic N and total organic C, labile C and C management index (CMI), were all increased by N inputs, from both fertiliser and N
2 fixation, and by retention of residues We concluded that retention of residues improves the N economy of the cropping system and enhances crop productivity through the additional N and other soil effects. The question of whether farmers who traditionally remove residues for |
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ISSN: | 0378-4290 1872-6852 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0378-4290(03)00005-4 |