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      Fate of nitrogen from green manure, straw, and fertilizer applied to wheat under different summer fallow management strategies in dryland

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          The priming effect of organic matter: a question of microbial competition?

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            China's environment in a globalizing world.

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              Reducing environmental risk by improving N management in intensive Chinese agricultural systems.

              Excessive N fertilization in intensive agricultural areas of China has resulted in serious environmental problems because of atmospheric, soil, and water enrichment with reactive N of agricultural origin. This study examines grain yields and N loss pathways using a synthetic approach in 2 of the most intensive double-cropping systems in China: waterlogged rice/upland wheat in the Taihu region of east China versus irrigated wheat/rainfed maize on the North China Plain. When compared with knowledge-based optimum N fertilization with 30-60% N savings, we found that current agricultural N practices with 550-600 kg of N per hectare fertilizer annually do not significantly increase crop yields but do lead to about 2 times larger N losses to the environment. The higher N loss rates and lower N retention rates indicate little utilization of residual N by the succeeding crop in rice/wheat systems in comparison with wheat/maize systems. Periodic waterlogging of upland systems caused large N losses by denitrification in the Taihu region. Calcareous soils and concentrated summer rainfall resulted in ammonia volatilization (19% for wheat and 24% for maize) and nitrate leaching being the main N loss pathways in wheat/maize systems. More than 2-fold increases in atmospheric deposition and irrigation water N reflect heavy air and water pollution and these have become important N sources to agricultural ecosystems. A better N balance can be achieved without sacrificing crop yields but significantly reducing environmental risk by adopting optimum N fertilization techniques, controlling the primary N loss pathways, and improving the performance of the agricultural Extension Service.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biology and Fertility of Soils
                Biol Fertil Soils
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0178-2762
                1432-0789
                October 2015
                May 14 2015
                October 2015
                : 51
                : 7
                : 769-780
                Article
                10.1007/s00374-015-1023-2
                9d7f613b-db5e-4b56-b01a-2492a08ae1db
                © 2015

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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