Nitrous oxide emissions from soybean in response to drained and undrained soils and previous corn nitrogen management

Author:

Fabrizzi Karina P.1ORCID,Fernández Fabián G.1ORCID,Venterea Rodney T.12ORCID,Naeve Seth L.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Soil, Water, and Climate University of Minnesota Saint Paul Minnesota USA

2. Soil and Water Management Research Unit USDA‐ARS Saint Paul Minnesota USA

3. Department of Agronomy and Plant Genetics University of Minnesota Saint Paul Minnesota USA

Abstract

AbstractWhile corn (Zea mays L.)‐soybean (Glycine max. Merr. L) is a predominant rotation system in the US Midwest the residual effect of nitrogen (N) fertilization to corn on the following year's soybean and N2O emissions under different soil drainage conditions has not been studied. Our objective was to quantify agronomic parameters and season‐long N2O emissions from soybean as affected by N management (0‐N and optimum N rate of 135 kg N ha−1 as single or split application) during the previous corn crop under drained and undrained systems. Urea was applied to corn, and residual N effects were measured on soybean the following year in a poorly drained soil with and without subsurface tile drainage. Drainage reduced N2O emissions in one of three growing seasons but had no effect on soybean yield or N removal in grain. Nitrogen management in the previous corn crop had no effect on soybean grain yield, N removal, or N2O emissions during the soybean phase. Even though soybean symbiotically fixes N and removes more N in grain than corn, N2O emissions were more than two times greater during the corn phase (mean = 1.83 kg N ha−1) due to N fertilization than during the soybean phase (mean = 0.80 kg N ha−1). Also, N2O emissions in the corn years were increased possibly due to decomposition of the previous year's soybean crop residue compared to corn residue decomposition in the soybean years. Tile drainage, especially where wet soil conditions are prevalent, is a viable option to mitigate agricultural N2O emissions.

Funder

Minnesota Soybean Research and Promotion Council

Publisher

Wiley

Reference41 articles.

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