4.4 Article

Combining nitrification inhibitors with a reduced N rate maintains yield and reduces N2O emissions in sweet corn

Journal

NUTRIENT CYCLING IN AGROECOSYSTEMS
Volume 125, Issue 2, Pages 107-121

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10705-021-10185-y

Keywords

Nitrogen; Nitrous oxide; Enhanced efficiency fertilisers; Recovery efficiency of fertiliser nitrogen; Greenhouse gas emissions

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Intensive vegetable production leads to low nitrogen use efficiency and high nitrous oxide emissions. The use of nitrification inhibitors can effectively increase nitrogen use efficiency and decrease nitrous oxide emissions. This study found that using nitrification inhibitors significantly reduced nitrous oxide emissions and nitrogen fertilizer losses without reducing crop yield.
Intensive vegetable production is characterised by high nitrogen (N) application rates and frequent irrigations, promoting elevated nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions, a powerful greenhouse gas indicative for the low N use efficiency (NUE) in these systems. The use of nitrification inhibitors (NI) has been promoted as an effective strategy to increase NUE and decrease N2O emissions in N-intensive agricultural systems. This study investigated the effect of two NIs, 3,4-dimethylpyrazole phosphate (DMPP) and 3-methylpyrazole 1,2,4-triazole (Piadin), on N2O emissions and N-15 fertiliser recovery in a field experiment in sweet corn. The trial compared the conventional fertiliser N rate to a 20% reduced rate combined with either DMPP or Piadin. The use of NI-coated urea at a 20% reduced application rate decreased cumulative N2O emissions by 51% without yield penalty. More than 25% of applied N was lost from the conventional treatment, while a reduced N rate in combination with the use of a NI significantly decreased N fertiliser losses (by up to 98%). Across treatments, between 30 and 50% of applied N fertiliser remained in the soil, highlighting the need to account for residual N to optimise fertilisation in the following crop. The reduction of overall N losses without yield penalties suggests that the extra cost of using NIs can be compensated by reduced fertiliser application rates, making the use of NIs an economically viable management strategy for growers while minimising environmentally harmful N losses from vegetable growing systems.

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