Reducing environmental risk by improving N management in intensive Chinese agricultural systems
China Agricultural University · Chinese Academy of Sciences · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Excessive N fertilization in intensive agricultural areas of China has resulted in serious environmental problems because of atmospheric, soil, and water enrichment with reactive N of agricultural origin. This study examines grain yields and N loss pathways using a synthetic approach in 2 of the most intensive double-cropping systems in China: waterlogged rice/upland wheat in the Taihu region of east China versus irrigated wheat/rainfed maize on the North China Plain. When compared with knowledge-based optimum N fertilization with 30-60% N savings, we found that current agricultural N practices with 550-600 kg of N per hectare fertilizer annually do not significantly increase crop yields but do lead to about 2…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 55.06
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 53
Authors
11Topics & keywords
- Environmental science
- Leaching (pedology)
- Agronomy
- Fertilizer
- Hectare
- Irrigation
- Agriculture
- Crop yield
- Zero hunger