Abstract

Improper application of nitrogen fertilizer for winter wheat production in the North China Plain (NCP) limits N use efficiency and increases the risk of non-point pollution. Crop simulation models may help with the assessment of N fertilizer management, to improve nitrogen use efficiency and to mitigate environmental pollution. In this study, the DSSAT-CERES-Wheat model was calibrated and validated with two-year field experiment, which coupled with five N rates (0, 120, 180, 240, and 300 kg ha−1) and three irrigation levels (40, 30, and 20 mm per irrigation) under drip irrigation. The calibrated DSSAT-CERES-Wheat model performed well in simulating the anthesis date (nRMSE=1.47%, d=0.89), maturity date (nRMSE=0.97%, d=0.92), shoot biomass (nRMSE=10.97%, d=0.92), grain yield (nRMSE=6.19%, d=0.96), and actual evapotranspiration (nRMSE=9.96%, d=0.76) of drip-irrigated winter wheat in two years. The calibrated model was subsequently used to evaluate drip-irrigated winter wheat production in response to six N rates (0, 120, 180, 240, 300, and 360 kg ha−1) under 40 meteorological scenarios, and the results showed that grain yields, water use efficiency, irrigation water use efficiency, and net margins increased with increasing N application rates until it reached 180 kg ha−1. Above 180 kg ha−1, negligible changes were measured in these values as the N rate increased. The nitrogen physiological efficiency and nitrogen partial factor productivity were greatly improved at a N rate of 180 kg ha−1, compared with those at a N rate of 240, 300, and 360 kg ha−1. Consequently, N rate of 180 kg ha−1 was the optimal nitrogen application rate for drip-irrigated winter wheat production. These results may provide a scientific basis for nitrogen management of drip-irrigated winter wheat in the NCP.

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