Short-term effects of biogas residue application on yield performance and N balance parameters of maize in different cropping systems

被引:27
|
作者
Herrmann, A. [1 ]
Sieling, K. [2 ]
Wienforth, B. [2 ]
Taube, F. [1 ]
Kage, H. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Kiel, Inst Crop Sci & Plant Breeding Grass & Forage Sci, D-24118 Kiel, Germany
[2] Univ Kiel, Inst Crop Sci & Plant Breeding Agron & Crop Sci, D-24118 Kiel, Germany
来源
JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE | 2013年 / 151卷 / 04期
关键词
NITROGEN CATCH CROPS; SILAGE MAIZE; ORGANIC NITROGEN; USE EFFICIENCY; DAIRY MANURES; OILSEED RAPE; SWINE MANURE; MINERAL N; SLURRY; CORN;
D O I
10.1017/S0021859612000548
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
The expansion of biogas production in Germany poses a challenge in terms of the production of substrates for co-fermentation and the efficient use of biogas residues as fertilizers. At present there is limited information on the fertilizer value of biogas residues from energy-cropping systems. A 2-year field experiment was conducted at two sites in northern Germany to quantify the yield, nitrogen (N) concentration and the N balance of maize (Zea mays L.) grown in different crop rotations: (i) maize monoculture (R1), (ii) maize - whole-crop wheat followed by Italian ryegrass as catch crop (R2) and (iii) maize - grain wheat followed by mustard as catch crop (R3). Crops were fertilized with different levels of biogas residues, cattle slurry, pig slurry, or mineral N fertilizer, which allowed quantification of the apparent N recovery (ANR) of the fertilizer types tested. The results revealed that crop rotation in interaction with N amount had a pronounced effect on the yield of maize. Maximum yield of 19.1 t dry matter (DM)/ha, corresponding to biogas production of 6685 m(N)(3) CH4/ha, was achieved in maize monoculture on a sandy loam site. Maize grown in R3 showed the lowest N response but had the highest yield under low N supply, whereas R2 generally had the lowest yield and N content. Differences in yield performance were reflected in the N balances, differing by 50 kg N/ha between R1 and R2, whereas R3 produced the lowest yield at low N supply. The carry-over effects from the preceding catch crops in R2 and R3, however, reduce the meaningfulness of the simple N balance. Nitrogen fertilizer type showed no interaction with crop rotation. Biogas residue application resulted in similar maize yielding performance to pig slurry and cattle slurry. However, relative N fertilizer value (RNFV) was 30% higher for biogas residue at optimal N supply, i.e. the minimum N input to achieve maximum DM yield.
引用
收藏
页码:449 / 462
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Short-Term Effects of Conversion from Reduced Tillage to Direct-Seeding Mulch-Based Cropping Systems
    Kulagowski, Remy
    Chailleux, Anais
    JOURNAL OF CROP IMPROVEMENT, 2015, 29 (05) : 650 - 668
  • [42] Potential mechanisms of maize yield reduction under short-term no-tillage combined with residue coverage in the semi-humid region of Northeast China
    Li, Ruiping
    Zheng, Jinyu
    Xie, Ruizhi
    Ming, Bo
    Peng, Xinhua
    Luo, Yang
    Zheng, Hongbing
    Sui, Pengxiang
    Wang, Keru
    Hou, Peng
    Hou, Liangyu
    Zhang, Guoqiang
    Bai, Shijie
    Wang, Hao
    Liu, Wuren
    Li, Shaokun
    SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH, 2022, 217
  • [43] Potential mechanisms of maize yield reduction under short-term no-tillage combined with residue coverage in the semi-humid region of Northeast China
    Li, Ruiping
    Zheng, Jinyu
    Xie, Ruizhi
    Ming, Bo
    Peng, Xinhua
    Luo, Yang
    Zheng, Hongbing
    Sui, Pengxiang
    Wang, Keru
    Hou, Peng
    Hou, Liangyu
    Zhang, Guoqiang
    Bai, Shijie
    Wang, Hao
    Liu, Wuren
    Li, Shaokun
    SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH, 2022, 217
  • [44] Intraday variation in short-term maximal performance: effects of different warm-up modalities
    Baklouti, Hana
    Aloui, Asma
    Malatesta, Davide
    Baklouti, Souad
    Souissi, Nizar
    Chtourou, Hamdi
    SPORT SCIENCES FOR HEALTH, 2021, 17 (03) : 607 - 614
  • [45] Effects Of Short-term Pre-workout Supplement Ingestion At Different Dosages On Exercise Performance
    Jung, Y. P.
    Koozechian, M.
    O'Connor, A.
    Shin, S.
    Collins, P. B.
    Dalton, R.
    Grubic, T.
    Sowinski, R.
    Sanchez, B. K.
    Coletta, A.
    Cho, M.
    Reyes, A.
    Rasmussen, C.
    Murano, P. S.
    Greenwood, M.
    Earnest, C. P.
    Kreider, R. B.
    MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE, 2016, 48 (05): : 254 - 254
  • [46] Intraday variation in short-term maximal performance: effects of different warm-up modalities
    Hana Baklouti
    Asma Aloui
    Davide Malatesta
    Souad Baklouti
    Nizar Souissi
    Hamdi Chtourou
    Sport Sciences for Health, 2021, 17 : 607 - 614
  • [47] Short-term impact of crop diversification on soil carbon fluxes and balance in rainfed and irrigated woody cropping systems under semiarid Mediterranean conditions
    Martinez-Mena, Maria
    Boix-Fayos, Carolina
    Carrillo-Lopez, Efrain
    Diaz-Pereira, Elvira
    Zornoza, Raul
    Sanchez-Navarro, Virginia
    Acosta, Jose A.
    Martinez-Martinez, Silvia
    Almagro, Maria
    PLANT AND SOIL, 2021, 467 (1-2) : 499 - 514
  • [48] Short-term impact of crop diversification on soil carbon fluxes and balance in rainfed and irrigated woody cropping systems under semiarid Mediterranean conditions
    María Martínez-Mena
    Carolina Boix-Fayos
    Efrain Carrillo-López
    Elvira Díaz-Pereira
    Raúl Zornoza
    Virginia Sánchez-Navarro
    Jose A. Acosta
    Silvia Martínez-Martínez
    María Almagro
    Plant and Soil, 2021, 467 : 499 - 514
  • [49] Arbuscular Mycorrhiza in Highly Fertilized Maize Cultures Alleviates Short-Term Drought Effects but Does Not Improve Fodder Yield and Quality
    Polcyn, Wladyslaw
    Paluch-Lubawa, Ewelina
    Lehmann, Teresa
    Mikula, Robert
    FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 2019, 10
  • [50] Effects of short-term plowing and organic amendments on soil physical properties and maize yield in dark brown soil in Northeast China
    Li N.
    Long J.
    Han X.
    Zhang F.
    Lei W.
    Sheng M.
    Han Z.
    1600, Chinese Society of Agricultural Engineering (37): : 99 - 107