Abstract

Greater synchrony between populations and individual plants is dependent on the interactions between plant density and nitrogen (N) fertilization and is crucial to achieve food and environment security. A two-factor designed experiment of transplanted winter oilseed rape was conducted in the 2012–2013 and 2013–2014 growing seasons in central China. Five transplanted plant densities and six N rates were used to study the influences of plant density and N fertilizer application rate on seed yield, N uptake and apparent N surplus. Optimal plant density was the prerequisite to obtain high seed yield and the contribution of plant density to seed yield was minor when it exceeded the optimal density. N fertilization offset the compensatory effect between plant density and pods per plant, enhance seed yield further. Seed yield increased linearly with the increase of seed N uptake, however, it did not increase as the non-seed parts (stem+pod wall) N uptake increased when seed yield exceeded the critical values in the high plant density treatments. Higher plant densities promoted shoot N uptake and reduced soil mineral N residues and apparent N surplus in root zone. Compared with the recommended transplanted density in this region (9.0×104 plant ha−1), the optimal N fertilizer application rate could be cut down with 10.3%–23.7% for the target yield (3000kgha−1) and apparent N surplus would be declined with 41.5%–92.1% when the density suitably increased to 10.0–12.0×104 plant ha−1; On the contrary, when the density was decreased to 7.0–8.0×104 plant ha−1, increasing N fertilization rate with 13.9%–34.8% also could gain the target yield, but the apparent N surplus would increase with 58.1%–148.0%. Consequently, varied combinations between plant densities and N fertilizer application rate are useful to fulfill high seed yield. Reducing N fertilizer rates under suitable higher plant densities are the optimal N management strategy to achieve high yield with lower environment risks.

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