Analyzing and modelling the effect of long-term fertilizer management on crop yield and soil organic carbon in China

Jie Zhang, Juraj Balkovič, Ligia B. Azevedo, Rastislav Skalský, Alexander F. Bouwman, Guang Xu, Jinzhou Wang, Minggang Xu*, Chaoqing Yu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

This study analyzes the influence of various fertilizer management practices on crop yield and soil organic carbon (SOC) based on the long-term field observations and modelling. Data covering 11 years from 8 long-term field trials were included, representing a range of typical soil, climate, and agro-ecosystems in China. The process-based model EPIC (Environmental Policy Integrated Climate model) was used to simulate the response of crop yield and SOC to various fertilization regimes. The results showed that the yield and SOC under additional manure application treatment were the highest while the yield under control treatment was the lowest (30%–50% of NPK yield) at all sites. The SOC in northern sites appeared more dynamic than that in southern sites. The variance partitioning analysis (VPA) showed more variance of crop yield could be explained by the fertilization factor (42%), including synthetic nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), potassium (K) fertilizers, and fertilizer NPK combined with manure. The interactive influence of soil (total N, P, K, and available N, P, K) and climate factors (mean annual temperature and precipitation) determine the largest part of the SOC variance (32%). EPIC performs well in simulating both the dynamics of crop yield (NRMSE = 32% and 31% for yield calibration and validation) and SOC (NRMSE = 13% and 19% for SOC calibration and validation) under diverse fertilization practices in China. EPIC can assist in predicting the impacts of different fertilization regimes on crop growth and soil carbon dynamics, and contribute to the optimization of fertilizer management for different areas in China.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)361-372
Number of pages12
JournalScience of the Total Environment
Volume627
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jun 2018

Funding

We acknowledge our colleagues from China National Soil Fertility and Fertilizer Effects Long-term Monitoring Network for their unremitting efforts to the long-term experiments. We are also grateful to Xiangbin Ran from First Institute of Oceanography, China and Jie Hu from Nanjing Agricultural University for their constructive comments and suggestions. This research was financially supported by the MOST project 2017YFA0603602 , the National Natural Science Foundation (No. 41371491 and 41511140122 ), the European Research Council Synergy grant ERC-2013-SynG-610028 IMBALANCE-P, and was partly conducted during the Young Scientists Summer Program (YSSP) program of IIASA, Austria.

Keywords

  • Crop yield
  • EPIC model
  • Fertilizer management
  • Long-term field experiments
  • Soil organic carbon

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