Abstract

Abstract Adjusting planting date along with supplemental irrigation is widely used to improve potato yield in the agro-pastoral ecotone (APE) with high variability of limited rainfall in North China. Optimal planting date and supplemental irrigation time for potato differed greatly with climate and soil conditions, and were not fully investigated via field experiments. In this study, using APSIM-Potato model carefully calibrated and validated with two-years serial planting experimental data, the individual and coupled impacts of planting date and supplemental irrigation time on yield and water productivity (PWP) of potato were quantified across the APE. APSIM-Potato performed well in simulating phenology, leaf area index (LAI), soil water dynamics, biomass of potato, and also captured the trend in potato yields under different planting dates. Based on the long-term simulations from 1981 to 2010, the optimal planting dates were May 10 (local normal planting date), May 20 and May 30 in the eastern, middle and western APE, respectively. Yield and PWP of potato could be increased by 12.5% and 7.0% in the middle APE, 23.3% and 18.3% in the western APE respectively, under the optimal planting date compared with the local normal planting date under rainfed condition. Supplemental irrigation (8-55 mm) from rainwater harvesting could increase potato yield by 3.5-35.2%, 6.9-41.8%, and 9.0-50.8% respectively, in the eastern, middle and western APE. The corresponding PWP could be enhanced by 1.2-22.7%, 6.7-30.8% and 4.5-33.7%, respectively. Combining the optimal planting date with better scheduling the maximal harvested rainwater could increase yield and PWP of potato by 36.8% and 23.4%, 69.2% and 49.2%, 64.3% and 48.8%, respectively for the eastern, middle and western APE, compared with the simulation results under the local normal planting dates and rainfed condition. The study suggested a large potential of increasing yield and PWP of potato across the APE by optimizing planting date and better scheduling the supplemental irrigation from rainwater harvesting.

Full Text
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