Ning An, Lei Zhang, Jeff J. Schoenau, Yao Liu, Binbin Ren, Zhengchao Wu, Wei Han, Xiaori Han
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Straw and biochar have shown potential to enhance soil structure, increase nutrient availability, improve crop productivity, and reduce reliance on chemical fertilizers. However, their cumulative effectiveness as partial fertilizer substitutes over extended periods remains unclear. This study evaluated rice (Oryza sativa L.) straw and its biochar as partial fertilizer substitutes on soil pore structure, nutrient supply, pH, root growth, yield, and nitrogen partial factor productivity (PFPN-chem) in a 7-year field trial in Northeast China. The experiment included five treatments: (1) 100% chemical NPK fertilizer (NPK), (2) low-dose biochar (LB: 1.5 Mg ha−1 year−1), (3) high-dose biochar (HB: 3.0 Mg ha−1 year−1), (4) low-dose straw (LS: 4.5 Mg ha−1 year−1), and (5) high-dose straw (HS: 9.0 Mg ha−1 year−1). Chemical NPK application rates in the straw and biochar treatments were adjusted to maintain equivalent total nutrient level. After 7 years, both LB and LS attained average rice yields (LB: 6.7; LS: 7.6 Mg ha−1) similar to NPK (7.3 Mg ha−1), though initial yields were lower than NPK. This parity resulted from enhanced macroporosity and pore connectivity, which promoted root growth to compensate for reduced nitrogen availability. Specifically, LS exhibited 42.4% greater macroporosity (100–500 µm), 19.3% longer roots, and 54.8% higher root biomass than LB, yielding superior PFPN-chem (+27.3%) with a 16% chemical N fertilizer reduction. However, high doses (HB/HS) led to average yield declines (22.8% and 13.1% lower than NPK). These findings highlight the potential of low-dose straw and biochar as sustainable strategies for improving soil quality and reducing fertilizer dependency.
期刊介绍:
After critical review and approval by the editorial board, AJ publishes articles reporting research findings in soil–plant relationships; crop science; soil science; biometry; crop, soil, pasture, and range management; crop, forage, and pasture production and utilization; turfgrass; agroclimatology; agronomic models; integrated pest management; integrated agricultural systems; and various aspects of entomology, weed science, animal science, plant pathology, and agricultural economics as applied to production agriculture.
Notes are published about apparatus, observations, and experimental techniques. Observations usually are limited to studies and reports of unrepeatable phenomena or other unique circumstances. Review and interpretation papers are also published, subject to standard review. Contributions to the Forum section deal with current agronomic issues and questions in brief, thought-provoking form. Such papers are reviewed by the editor in consultation with the editorial board.