Abstract

Plastic film and gravel mulching in combination with fertilization are widely used to increase crop yields and water productivity (WP) in arid and semiarid areas, but soil surface mulching may stimulate soil organic carbon (SOC) mineralization; therefore, film mulching with manure amendment was proposed to improve soil fertility. However, the combined effects of these practices on yield, WP, and the stocks of SOC and total nitrogen (TN) need to be better understood. This study investigated the long-term effects of different practices on crop yields, WP, and SOC and TN stocks in the 0–20, 20–40 and 40–60 cm layers based on a 12-year spring maize (Zea mays L.) field experiment on the Loess Plateau. The treatments included no mulching + NPK (CK), gravel mulching + NPK (GM), film mulching + NPK (FM), and film mulching + NPK + cow manure (FCM). In 2019 and 2020, compared with the control, both FM and FCM significantly increased crop yields, WP, N uptake efficiency (NupE) and N fertilizer productivity (NfP). Compared with CK, the FCM treatment significantly increased the SOC and TN stocks by 44.10% and 39.51%, respectively, on average, and the minimum C input that could maintain the soil C balance on the Loess Plateau was 0.67 Mg ha−1 yr−1. Over the 12 experimental years, compared with the initial value in 2009, the trends of SOC and TN contents in the FM treatment were downward, while those in the FCM treatment increased by 41.61% and 30.27%, respectively, but yearly input of manure led to SOC equilibrium. Compared with CK, the FCM treatment significantly decreased SOC and TN sequestration potential by 33.38% and 19.59%, respectively, on average in topsoil (0–20 cm), but it had less of an effect on SOC and TN sequestration at 20–40 and 40–60 cm soil depths. The reasons for SOC reaching equilibrium in the FCM treatment were analyzed, and periodic subsoiling was proposed to break the equilibrium state to further improve the sequestration amount of SOC and TN at 0–60 cm soil depths. In conclusion, film mulching with manure amendment was recommended as a long-term strategy to improve soil productivity and soil fertility in semiarid farmland.

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