Abstract
ContextEnhanced efficiency nitrogen fertilizers (EENFs) have provided opportunities for the simultaneous mitigation of nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions and increases in crop productions. However, the practice of combining EENFs with optimal fertilization under conditions of misaligned water and fertilizer inputs in rain-fed spring maize systems remains inadequately understood. ObjectiveThis study aims to determine the factors controlling N2O emissions under the soil climatic conditions in rain-fed plastic mulching cropping systems treated with different nitrogen (N) fertilization rates and EENFs, and to determine the most effective N fertilization measure to reduce N2O emissions while maintaining crop yields. MethodsA 3-year field experiment was conducted in a spring maize system located in the semiarid rain-fed region of the Loess Plateau, applying two types of EENFs: a nitrification inhibitor dicyandiamide (DCD) and a slow-release fertilizer (SRF). It comprised five fertilization treatments: unfertilized (CK), conventional N rate (CON, 200 kg N ha−1), optimal N rate (OPT, 160 kg N ha−1), OPT with the addition of DCD (OPT+DCD), and OPT using SRF (OPT-SRF). ResultsThe average annual cumulative N2O emissions over the 3-year experimental period ranged from 0.74 to 1.87 kg N2O-N ha–1. Fertilizer N contributed 26−60% to annual N2O emissions. The highest N2O fluxes (50–161 μg N2O-N m–2 h–1) typically occurred within the initial 10 days following fertilization, likely induced by strong nitrification processes, constituting 12–19% of the annual N2O emissions during this brief period. In comparison to the CON treatment, the OPT, OPT+DCD, and OPT-SRF treatments resulted in significant reductions in annual N2O emissions of 24%, 46%, and 34%, respectively, without causing any significant decrease in maize grain yields. The application of DCD led to increased ammonium (NH4+-N) concentrations while reducing nitrate (NO3–-N). Conversely, using SRF resulted in a decrease in both NH4+-N and NO3–-N concentrations. ConclusionsUsing EENFs at the ideal fertilization rate significantly curtailed yearly N2O emissions without adversely affecting maize yields in a rain-fed plastic mulching spring maize system prevalent in the Loess Plateau. Most N2O emissions occurred post-fertilization, with rainfall events further influencing these emissions. ImplicationsOur findings recommend the incorporation of nitrification inhibitors, such as DCD, as the most effective fertilizer measure for reducing N2O emissions in the rain-fed region of the Loess Plateau.
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