4.8 Article

Luck versus Skill: Is Nitrogen Balance in Irrigated Maize Fields Driven by Persistent or Random Factors?

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 1, Pages 749-756

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c05655

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Nebraska Corn Board (NCB)
  2. Agriculture and Food Research Initiative (AFRI) of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) [12431808]

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The study revealed that persistent factors play a significant role in explaining the variations in nitrogen balance in maize fields, with 70% of fields exhibiting nitrogen surplus in different years. Fields growing maize continuously and applying higher nitrogen inputs are more likely to have a large nitrogen balance.
The nitrogen (N) balance (i.e., the difference between N inputs and grain N removal) provides an indication of potential N losses to the environment. The magnitude of the N balance in a given year reflects the influence of random (e.g., climate, pest outbreak) and/or persistent (e.g., producer skills, soil type) factors over time. We assessed here the degree to which variation in magnitude of N balance across irrigated maize fields in the US Corn Belt was explained by persistent factors and identified the underlying drivers. Fields with large N balance were identified in specific (ranking) years, and these same fields were assessed in other (nonranking) years. Persistent factors explained up to half of the variation in N balance, with 70% of fields with N surplus in a given year also exhibiting surplus in other years. Persistence in large N balance was associated with fields growing maize continuously and applying higher N inputs without any yield advantage compared with other fields. There was also a relationship between N balance and mismatch between producer actual and recommended N rate. These findings highlight available room to reduce N excess in producer fields via improved management, providing a starting point to set priorities and inform policy.

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