Combining time-variable controlled release urea formulations to improve spring maize yield and reduce nitrogen losses in northeastern China

Yunpeng Hou,Xinpeng Xu, Lili Kong,Yitao Zhang, Lei Zhang, Lichun Wang

European Journal of Agronomy(2024)

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Abstract
The application of controlled-release urea (CRU) has become an important practice to increase maize yield and nitrogen (N) use efficiency (NUE) with one-time fertilization management. The appropriate ratios and application effects of combinations of regular urea and CRU with different N-release periods (U–CRU) may vary because of regional climate and crop specificity. A three-year (2019–2021) field experiment was conducted in the northeastern region of China to investigate the effects of U–CRU on maize yield, NUE, changes in soil inorganic N content, and apparent N loss. With N fertilizer applied at 210 kg ha–1, two types of CRU with release periods of 60 days (CRUa) and 90 days (CRUb) were mixed with regular urea in four different combinations: CRU1 (Urea 40 % + CRUa 60 %), CRU2 (Urea 40 % + CRUa 40 % + CRUb 20 %), CRU3 (Urea 40 % + CRUa 20 % + CRUb 40 %), CRU4 (Urea 40 % + CRUb 60 %). The controls were Urea (U) only and no N fertilizer application (N0). Compared with U, all U–CRU treatments significantly increased soil inorganic N contents (NO3––N, 1.4–7.0 mg kg–1; NH4+–N, 0.3–1.3 mg kg–1) in the 0–20 cm soil layer from twelfth-leaf (V12) to physiological maturity (PM) stages of maize. Furthermore, U–CRU treatments increased N uptake from silking (R1) to PM stages and therefore contributed to grain N accumulation which increased 17.1–30.9 % and improved N recovery efficiency (REN), which increased by 8.1–13.1 %. Associated with increases in quantity of ears and 100-grain weight, maize yield increased by 12.2–18.9 % in CRU3, with the increases the highest among treatments. Additionally, compared with U, all U–CRU treatments significantly reduced the inorganic N content in the deep soil layer (40–100 cm) and the lowest apparent N loss was in CRU3, decreasing by 93.4 kg ha–1 compared with that in U. Regression relations between the mixture ratios of CRUs and maize yield, apparent soil N loss, and REN were used to determine that the appropriate ratio of U:CRUa:CRUb to attain high maize yield and NUE was 40 %:18.6–24.6 %:35.4–41.4 %. Therefore, determining the optimum mixture ratios of CRUs can increase maize yield and NUE while reducing the risk of N loss in continuous maize cropping systems. The results provide a scientific basis for N fertilizer management in spring maize production in northeastern China.
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Key words
Controlled-release urea,Nitrogen loss,Nitrogen use efficiency,Soil inorganic nitrogen,Northeast China
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