296-5 Do Cover Crops and Historical Fertilizer Rate Affect Nitrous Oxide Emissions From Soybean As Well As Maize?.
Poster Number 1726
See more from this Division: S06 Soil & Water Management & ConservationSee more from this Session: Nitrogen-Use Efficiency, Nitrogen Leaching, and Nitrous Oxide Emissions As Influenced by Management Practices: II
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Duke Energy Convention Center, Exhibit Hall AB, Level 1
Fertilized soils in maize-soybean [Zea mays L.-Glycine max (L.) Merr.) systems can produce substantial quantities of N2O, depending on management practices. Few studies have measured N2O emissions from soybean following maize fertilized at varied N rates. We conducted a 2-year study of N2O emissions from both phases of a maize-soybean rotation in central Iowa, USA. Treatments were use of winter rye cover crop (Secale cereale L.) after both crops and a range of fertilizer N rates (0 to 224 kg ha-1). Precipitation differed greatly between the two years, slightly below and substantially below the long-term average in 2011 and 2012, respectively. In the first year, N fertilizer application increased N2O emissions in maize. Cover crops were found to reduce soil nitrate (NO3-) concentration in the maize phase of the rotation. However, in the first year N2O production was only reduced by the cover crop at 0 kg N ha-1 and was greater with the cover crop at a 135 kg N ha-1 in the maize. No differences between cover crop or N rate treatments were found in the soybean phase of the rotation in the first year. These results suggest that the role of cover crops in immobilizing soil NO3- does not necessarily decrease N2O emissions and that the effect of N fertilizer on N2O production in the maize year may not extend to the following soybean year.
See more from this Division: S06 Soil & Water Management & ConservationSee more from this Session: Nitrogen-Use Efficiency, Nitrogen Leaching, and Nitrous Oxide Emissions As Influenced by Management Practices: II