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Optimizing Application of Dairy Effluent with Synthetic N Fertilizer Reduced Nitrogen Leaching in Clay Loam Soil

54 Pages Posted: 27 Feb 2024 Publication Status: Published

See all articles by Obemah David Nartey

Obemah David Nartey

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Institute of Soil Sciences

Deyan Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Institute of Soil Sciences

Jiafa Luo

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Institute of Soil Sciences

Stuart Lindsey

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Institute of Soil Sciences

Zengming Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Institute of Soil Sciences

Junji Yuan

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS)

M. Zaman

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)

Jonathan N. Hogarh

Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana

Weixin Ding

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS)

Abstract

High application rates of dairy effluent and manure are often associated with nitrogen (N) leaching, which can affect groundwater quality. Here, we used a lysimeter to examine N leaching losses and biomass yield following application of dairy effluent and manure under wheat-maize cropping. The field experiment included seven treatments: no N fertilizer (Control); 200 / 300 kg N ha−1 synthetic N fertilizer only (wheat / maize) (CN); 100 / 150 kg N ha−1 synthetic N fertilizer plus 100 / 150 (DE1), 150 / 200 (DE2) and 250 / 350 (DE3) kg N ha−1 dairy effluent; 100 / 150 kg N ha−1 synthetic fertilizer plus 100 / 150 kg N ha−1 dairy manure (SM1); and 150 / 225 kg N ha−1 synthetic fertilizer plus 50 / 75 kg N ha−1 dairy manure (SM2). Compared with CN, DE1 treatment increased maize yield by 10.0%, wheat N use efficiency (NUE) by 26.5%, and wheat and maize N uptake by 7.7–16.3%, and reduced N leaching by 22.4–40.4%. In contrast, DE2 and DE3 treatment increased N leaching by 27.2–241% and reduced NUE by 26.2–55.2%. SM2 treatment increased yield and NUE by 8.8 and 7.8%, respectively, and reduced N leaching by 42.9% during the wheat but not the maize season. Annual N leaching losses were 37.6 kg N ha−1 under CN treatment, but decreased to 27.4 kg N ha−1 under DE1. In contrast, N leaching increased to 52.8 and 84.1 kg N ha−1 under DE2 and DE3 treatment, respectively (P < 0.05). Meanwhile, under SM1 and SM2 treatment, N leaching decreased by 71.2 and 32.0%, respectively, compared with CN. Taken together, these results suggest that replacing 50 and 25% synthetic N fertilizer with dairy farm effluent and manure could respectively reduce N leaching losses and increase soil fertility under wheat-maize cropping.

Keywords: Dairy effluent, Manure, Lysimeter, Inorganic nitrogen, Wheat-maize cropping

Suggested Citation

Nartey, Obemah David and Liu, Deyan and Luo, Jiafa and Lindsey, Stuart and Chen, Zengming and Yuan, Junji and Zaman, M. and Hogarh, Jonathan N. and Ding, Weixin, Optimizing Application of Dairy Effluent with Synthetic N Fertilizer Reduced Nitrogen Leaching in Clay Loam Soil. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4734127 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4734127

Obemah David Nartey

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Institute of Soil Sciences ( email )

Deyan Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Institute of Soil Sciences ( email )

Jiafa Luo

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Institute of Soil Sciences ( email )

Stuart Lindsey

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Institute of Soil Sciences ( email )

Zengming Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - Institute of Soil Sciences ( email )

Junji Yuan

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) ( email )

52 Sanlihe Rd.
Datun Road, Anwai
Beijing, Xicheng District 100864
China

M. Zaman

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) ( email )

Jonathan N. Hogarh

Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana

Kumasi, 00233
Ghana

Weixin Ding (Contact Author)

Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) ( email )

52 Sanlihe Rd.
Datun Road, Anwai
Beijing, Xicheng District 100864
China

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