4.7 Article

Understanding spatial and temporal variability of N leaching reduction by winter cover crops under climate change

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 771, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144770

Keywords

APSIM; Catch-crop; Environment; Modelling; Nitrogen; Pollution

Funding

  1. Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE)
  2. Discovery Science programme at PFR [DS17-19]

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This study evaluated the impact of climate change on the effectiveness of winter oat cover crops in reducing nitrogen leaching. The results showed that climate change may lead to uncertain effects of cover crops in different locations and times, necessitating targeted measures to address this variability.
Winter cover crops are sown in between main spring crops (e.g. cash and forage crops) to provide a range of benefits, including the reduction of nitrogen (N) leaching losses to groundwater. However, the extent by which winter cover crops will remain effective under future climate change is unclear. We assess variability and uncertainty of climate change effects on the reduction of N leaching by winter oat cover crops. Field data were collected to quantify ranges of cover crop above-ground biomass (7 to 10 t DM/ha) and N uptake (70 to 180 kg N/ha) under contrasting initial soil conditions. The data were also used to evaluate the APSIM-NextGen model (R-2 from 62 to 96% and RMSEr from 7 to 50%), which was then applied to simulate cover crop and fallow conditions across four key agricultural locations in New Zealand, under baseline and future climate scenarios. Cover crops reduced N leaching risks for all location/scenario combinations but with large variability in space and time (e.g. 21 to 47% of fallow) depending on the climate change scenario. For instance, end-of-century estimates for northern (warmer) locations mostly showed non-significant effects of climate change on cover crop effectiveness and N leaching. In contrast for southern (colder) locations, there was a systematic increase in N leaching risks with climate change intensity despite a concomitant, but less than proportional, increase in cover crop effectiveness (up to similar to 5% of baseline) due to higher winter yields and N uptake. This implies that climate change may not only modify the geography of N leaching hotspots, but also the extent by which cover crops can locally reduce pollution risks, in some cases requiring complementary adaptive measures. The patchy- and threshold-nature of leaching events indicates that fine spatio-temporal resolutions are better suited to evaluate cover crop effectiveness under climate change. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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