Estimates on nitrogen uptake in the subsequent wheat by above-ground and root residue and rhizodeposition of using peanut labeled with 15N isotope on the North China Plain

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Standard

Estimates on nitrogen uptake in the subsequent wheat by above-ground and root residue and rhizodeposition of using peanut labeled with 15N isotope on the North China Plain. / ZHANG, Kai; ZHAO, Jie; WANG, Xi quan; XU, He shui; ZANG, Hua dong; LIU, Jing na; HU, Yue gao; ZENG, Zhao hai.

In: Journal of Integrative Agriculture, Vol. 18, No. 3, 01.03.2019, p. 571-579.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

ZHANG, K, ZHAO, J, WANG, XQ, XU, HS, ZANG, HD, LIU, JN, HU, YG & ZENG, ZH 2019, 'Estimates on nitrogen uptake in the subsequent wheat by above-ground and root residue and rhizodeposition of using peanut labeled with 15N isotope on the North China Plain', Journal of Integrative Agriculture, vol. 18, no. 3, pp. 571-579. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2095-3119(18)62112-4

APA

ZHANG, K., ZHAO, J., WANG, X. Q., XU, H. S., ZANG, H. D., LIU, J. N., HU, Y. G., & ZENG, Z. H. (2019). Estimates on nitrogen uptake in the subsequent wheat by above-ground and root residue and rhizodeposition of using peanut labeled with 15N isotope on the North China Plain. Journal of Integrative Agriculture, 18(3), 571-579. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2095-3119(18)62112-4

Vancouver

ZHANG K, ZHAO J, WANG XQ, XU HS, ZANG HD, LIU JN et al. Estimates on nitrogen uptake in the subsequent wheat by above-ground and root residue and rhizodeposition of using peanut labeled with 15N isotope on the North China Plain. Journal of Integrative Agriculture. 2019 Mar 1;18(3):571-579. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2095-3119(18)62112-4

Author

ZHANG, Kai ; ZHAO, Jie ; WANG, Xi quan ; XU, He shui ; ZANG, Hua dong ; LIU, Jing na ; HU, Yue gao ; ZENG, Zhao hai. / Estimates on nitrogen uptake in the subsequent wheat by above-ground and root residue and rhizodeposition of using peanut labeled with 15N isotope on the North China Plain. In: Journal of Integrative Agriculture. 2019 ; Vol. 18, No. 3. pp. 571-579.

Bibtex

@article{e502d10fab6748bf97f9f8cca0ec435b,
title = "Estimates on nitrogen uptake in the subsequent wheat by above-ground and root residue and rhizodeposition of using peanut labeled with 15N isotope on the North China Plain",
abstract = " Leguminous crops play a vital role in enhancing crop yield and improving soil fertility. Therefore, it can be used as an organic N source for improving soil fertility. The purpose of this study was to (i) quantify the amounts of N derived from rhizodeposition, root and above-ground biomass of peanut residue in comparison with wheat and (ii) estimate the effect of the residual N on the wheat-growing season in the subsequent year. The plants of peanut and wheat were stem fed with 15 N urea using the cotton-wick method at the Wuqiao Station of China Agricultural University in 2014. The experiment consisted of four residue-returning strategies in a randomized complete-block design: (i) no return of crop residue (CR0); (ii) return of above-ground biomass of peanut crop (CR1); (iii) return of peanut root biomass (CR2); and (iv) return of all residue of the whole peanut plant (CR3). The 31.5 and 21% of the labeled 15 N isotope were accumulated in the above-ground tissues (leaves and stems) of peanuts and wheat, respectively. N rhizodeposition of peanuts and wheat accounted for 14.91 and 3.61% of the BG 15 N, respectively. The 15 N from the below-ground 15 N-labeled of peanuts were supplied 11.3, 5.9, 13.5, and 6.1% of in the CR0, CR1, CR2, and CR3 treatments, respectively. Peanut straw contributes a significant proportion of N to the soil through the decomposition of plant residues and N rhizodeposition. With the current production level on the NCP, it is estimated that peanut straw can potentially replace 104 500 tons of synthetic N fertilizer per year. The inclusion of peanut in rotation with cereal can significantly reduce the use of N fertilizer and enhance the system sustainability. ",
keywords = "N labeling, crop residues, cropping system, rhizodeposition",
author = "Kai ZHANG and Jie ZHAO and WANG, {Xi quan} and XU, {He shui} and ZANG, {Hua dong} and LIU, {Jing na} and HU, {Yue gao} and ZENG, {Zhao hai}",
year = "2019",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/S2095-3119(18)62112-4",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "571--579",
journal = "Journal of Integrative Agriculture",
issn = "2095-3119",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Estimates on nitrogen uptake in the subsequent wheat by above-ground and root residue and rhizodeposition of using peanut labeled with 15N isotope on the North China Plain

AU - ZHANG, Kai

AU - ZHAO, Jie

AU - WANG, Xi quan

AU - XU, He shui

AU - ZANG, Hua dong

AU - LIU, Jing na

AU - HU, Yue gao

AU - ZENG, Zhao hai

PY - 2019/3/1

Y1 - 2019/3/1

N2 - Leguminous crops play a vital role in enhancing crop yield and improving soil fertility. Therefore, it can be used as an organic N source for improving soil fertility. The purpose of this study was to (i) quantify the amounts of N derived from rhizodeposition, root and above-ground biomass of peanut residue in comparison with wheat and (ii) estimate the effect of the residual N on the wheat-growing season in the subsequent year. The plants of peanut and wheat were stem fed with 15 N urea using the cotton-wick method at the Wuqiao Station of China Agricultural University in 2014. The experiment consisted of four residue-returning strategies in a randomized complete-block design: (i) no return of crop residue (CR0); (ii) return of above-ground biomass of peanut crop (CR1); (iii) return of peanut root biomass (CR2); and (iv) return of all residue of the whole peanut plant (CR3). The 31.5 and 21% of the labeled 15 N isotope were accumulated in the above-ground tissues (leaves and stems) of peanuts and wheat, respectively. N rhizodeposition of peanuts and wheat accounted for 14.91 and 3.61% of the BG 15 N, respectively. The 15 N from the below-ground 15 N-labeled of peanuts were supplied 11.3, 5.9, 13.5, and 6.1% of in the CR0, CR1, CR2, and CR3 treatments, respectively. Peanut straw contributes a significant proportion of N to the soil through the decomposition of plant residues and N rhizodeposition. With the current production level on the NCP, it is estimated that peanut straw can potentially replace 104 500 tons of synthetic N fertilizer per year. The inclusion of peanut in rotation with cereal can significantly reduce the use of N fertilizer and enhance the system sustainability.

AB - Leguminous crops play a vital role in enhancing crop yield and improving soil fertility. Therefore, it can be used as an organic N source for improving soil fertility. The purpose of this study was to (i) quantify the amounts of N derived from rhizodeposition, root and above-ground biomass of peanut residue in comparison with wheat and (ii) estimate the effect of the residual N on the wheat-growing season in the subsequent year. The plants of peanut and wheat were stem fed with 15 N urea using the cotton-wick method at the Wuqiao Station of China Agricultural University in 2014. The experiment consisted of four residue-returning strategies in a randomized complete-block design: (i) no return of crop residue (CR0); (ii) return of above-ground biomass of peanut crop (CR1); (iii) return of peanut root biomass (CR2); and (iv) return of all residue of the whole peanut plant (CR3). The 31.5 and 21% of the labeled 15 N isotope were accumulated in the above-ground tissues (leaves and stems) of peanuts and wheat, respectively. N rhizodeposition of peanuts and wheat accounted for 14.91 and 3.61% of the BG 15 N, respectively. The 15 N from the below-ground 15 N-labeled of peanuts were supplied 11.3, 5.9, 13.5, and 6.1% of in the CR0, CR1, CR2, and CR3 treatments, respectively. Peanut straw contributes a significant proportion of N to the soil through the decomposition of plant residues and N rhizodeposition. With the current production level on the NCP, it is estimated that peanut straw can potentially replace 104 500 tons of synthetic N fertilizer per year. The inclusion of peanut in rotation with cereal can significantly reduce the use of N fertilizer and enhance the system sustainability.

KW - N labeling

KW - crop residues

KW - cropping system

KW - rhizodeposition

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85062426155&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/S2095-3119(18)62112-4

DO - 10.1016/S2095-3119(18)62112-4

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85062426155

VL - 18

SP - 571

EP - 579

JO - Journal of Integrative Agriculture

JF - Journal of Integrative Agriculture

SN - 2095-3119

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 216347420