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Optimizing nitrogen fertilizer and straw management promote root extension and nitrogen uptake to improve grain yield and nitrogen use efficiency of winter wheat ( <i>Triticum aestivum L.</i> )

Jinhong Yu, Pan Hou, Qiang Gao, Qingwen Tan, Dong Jiang, Tingbo Dai, Zhongwei Tian

2024Archives of Agronomy and Soil Science10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Straw returning is an efficient straw usage strategy in rice-wheat rotation, but nitrogen (N) use efficiency (NUE) was decreased due to incorrect straw and N fertilizer managements. To investigate the effects of straw and N fertilizer management on root growth, N fertilizer fates, grain yield and NUE of wheat, a two-year field and micro-plot 15N-labelled experiment under three levels of N application rate (0, 180 and 240 kg N ha−1) with two basal N application stages [seeding (BN), and 3-leaf stage (TN)] and three straw treatments [no straw return (NS), straw return by rotary tillage (SR) and straw return by ploughing (SP)] was conducted. The results indicated that SP increased grain yield and NUE, and the increase was highest under TN180. SP increased N uptake by enhancing root extension and soil N supply capacity, and TN decreased 15N residual in 60–100 cm soil layer. SP and TN180 both decreased 15N fertilizer loss and increased 15N recovery. Reducing basal N and applied at third-leaf stage (TN180) under SP had the same grain yield level as conventional N management (BN240) under NS, while highly improved NUE due to more root extension in deep soil layer and less N fertilizer loss.

Topics & Concepts

StrawAgronomyNitrogenYield (engineering)Grain yieldNitrogen fertilizerWinter wheatFertilizerEnvironmental scienceMathematicsChemistryBiologyMaterials scienceMetallurgyOrganic chemistryCrop Yield and Soil FertilityPlant nutrient uptake and metabolismSoil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics
Optimizing nitrogen fertilizer and straw management promote root extension and nitrogen uptake to improve grain yield and nitrogen use efficiency of winter wheat ( <i>Triticum aestivum L.</i> ) | Litcius