Minimizing nitrate leaching while maintaining crop yields

Insights by simulating net N mineralization

verfasst von
Sabine Heumann, Annegret Fier, Martin Haßdenteufel, Heinrich Höper, Walter Schäfer, Tim Eiler, Jürgen Böttcher
Abstract

Nitrate leaching from agricultural fields still is a serious threat in temperate regions, as it often causes an exceeding of the legal nitrate threshold in the groundwater. It was often proposed to lower mineral nitrogen (N) fertilization, but suboptimal N rates are usually associated with severe yield losses. Here it was hypothesized that the crop type has a strong impact on the relation between N leaching and yield, besides N fertilizer rates, due to crop-specific use of N mineralized from soil organic matter. We analysed N leaching and yield data of a field trial in NW-Germany with five mineral N fertilizer levels and a crop rotation of silage corn, winter barley and winter rye from 12 years. Net N mineralization was calculated with an N mineralization model, that allowed site-specific estimations, and with a balance approach based on measured field data. Yield and N leaching of the three crops strongly depended upon N supply, but N leaching could not be totally avoided even without any N fertilization, since for each crop type N leaching showed relatively constant values below an N supply of ca. 150 kg N ha-1. Secondly, the possibility of minimizing N leaching with concurrent modest reduction in yield (not more than 10 %) depended upon crop-specific use of mineralized N. Thirdly, these reductions appear to be most probable for silage corn due to 2-4 times higher N uptake in unfertilized plots (mean: 87 kg N ha-1) compared to the cereals (mean: 31 kg N ha-1). Thus there is a strong need to include estimates for net N mineralization in fertilizer recommendations, especially for corn, in order to more efficiently use mineralized N and reduce nitrate leaching. This is evident for the kind of sandy soil studied, and even stronger for soils with finer texture and consequently higher net N mineralization potential.

Organisationseinheit(en)
Institut für Bodenkunde
AG Bodenbiophysik
Externe Organisation(en)
Landesamt für Bergbau, Energie und Geologie (LBEG)
Landwirtschaftskammer Niedersachsen
Typ
Artikel
Journal
Nutrient cycling in agroecosystems
Band
95
Seiten
395-408
Anzahl der Seiten
14
ISSN
1385-1314
Publikationsdatum
04.2013
Publikationsstatus
Veröffentlicht
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Agronomie und Nutzpflanzenwissenschaften, Bodenkunde
Ziele für nachhaltige Entwicklung
SDG 2 – Kein Hunger
Elektronische Version(en)
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10705-013-9572-y (Zugang: Unbekannt)