Irrigation Water and Nitrogen Fertilizer Management in Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.): A Review

Author:

Shrestha Bhimsen1,Darapuneni Murali2,Stringam Blair L.1,Lombard Kevin3,Djaman Koffi3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, New Mexico State University, 1780 E University Ave, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA

2. Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, New Mexico State University, Rex E. Kirksey Agricultural Science Center at Tucumcari, 6502 Quay Road Am.5, Tucumcari, NM 88401, USA

3. Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, New Mexico State University, Agricultural Science Center at Farmington, Farmington, NM 87499, USA

Abstract

Intensive irrigation and nutrient management practices in agriculture have given rise to serious issues in aquifer water depletion and groundwater quality. This review discusses the effects of irrigation and nitrogen management practices on potato growth, yield, and quality, and their impacts on water and nitrogen use efficiencies. This review also highlights the economics and consequences of applying deficit irrigation strategies in potato production. Many researchers have demonstrated that excessive irrigation and nitrogen application rates negatively impact potato tuber yield and quality while also increasing nitrate leaching, energy consumption, and the overall costs of production. An application of light-to-moderate deficit irrigation (10–30% of full irrigation) together with reduced nitrogen rates (60–170 kg/ha) has a great potential to improve water and nitrogen use efficiencies while obtaining optimum yield and quality in potato production, depending on the climate, variety, soil type, and water availability. There is an opportunity to reduce N application rates in potato production through deficit irrigation practices by minimizing nitrate leaching beyond the crop root zone. The best irrigation and nitrogen management techniques for potato production, as discussed in this review, include using sprinkle and drip irrigation techniques, irrigation scheduling based on local crop coefficients, soil moisture content, and crop modeling techniques, applying slow-release nitrogenous fertilizers, split nitrogen application, and applying water and nitrogenous fertilizers in accordance with crop growth stage requirements.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Agronomy and Crop Science

Reference154 articles.

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2. United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) (2022). Potatoes 2021 Summary.

3. Singh, J., and Kaur, L. (2009). Advances in Potato Chemistry and Technology, Academic Press.

4. The importance of nutrient management for potato production Part I: Plant nutrition and yield;Koch;Potato Res.,2020

5. Djaman, K., Irmak, S., Koudahe, K., and Allen, S. (2021). Irrigation management in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) production: A review. Sustainability, 13.

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