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Managing nitrogen through cover crop species selection in the U.S. mid-Atlantic

Cover crops have the potential to be agricultural nitrogen (N) regulators that reduce leaching through soils and then deliver N to subsequent cash crops. Yet, regulating N in this way has proven difficult because the few cover crop species that are well-studied excel at either reducing N leaching or...

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Autores principales: Kaye, Jason, Finney, Denise, White, Charles, Bradley, Brosi, Schipanski, Meagan, Alonso-Ayuso, Maria, Hunter, Mitch, Burgess, Mac, Mejia, Catalina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6461281/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30978240
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215448
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author Kaye, Jason
Finney, Denise
White, Charles
Bradley, Brosi
Schipanski, Meagan
Alonso-Ayuso, Maria
Hunter, Mitch
Burgess, Mac
Mejia, Catalina
author_facet Kaye, Jason
Finney, Denise
White, Charles
Bradley, Brosi
Schipanski, Meagan
Alonso-Ayuso, Maria
Hunter, Mitch
Burgess, Mac
Mejia, Catalina
author_sort Kaye, Jason
collection PubMed
description Cover crops have the potential to be agricultural nitrogen (N) regulators that reduce leaching through soils and then deliver N to subsequent cash crops. Yet, regulating N in this way has proven difficult because the few cover crop species that are well-studied excel at either reducing N leaching or increasing N supply to cash crops, but they fail to excel at both simultaneously. We hypothesized that mixed species cover crop stands might balance the N fixing and N scavenging capabilities of individual species. We tested six cover crop monocultures and four mixtures for their effects on N cycling in an organically managed maize-soybean-wheat feed grain rotation in Pennsylvania, USA. For three years, we used a suite of integrated approaches to quantify N dynamics, including extractable soil inorganic N, buried anion exchange resins, bucket lysimeters, and plant N uptake. All cover crop species, including legume monocultures, reduced N leaching compared to fallow plots. Cereal rye monocultures reduced N leaching to buried resins by 90% relative to fallow; notably, mixtures with just a low seeding rate of rye did almost as well. Austrian winter pea monocultures increased N uptake in maize silage by 40 kg N ha(-1) relative to fallow, and conversely rye monocultures decreased N uptake into maize silage by 40 kg N ha(-1) relative to fallow. Importantly, cover crop mixtures had larger impacts on leaching reduction than on maize N uptake, when compared to fallow plots. For example, a three-species mixture of pea, red clover, and rye had similar maize N uptake to fallow plots, but leaching rates were 80% lower in this mixture than fallow plots. Our results show clearly that cover crop species selection and mixture design can substantially mitigate tradeoffs between N retention and N supply to cash crops, providing a powerful tool for managing N in temperate cropping systems.
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spelling pubmed-64612812019-05-03 Managing nitrogen through cover crop species selection in the U.S. mid-Atlantic Kaye, Jason Finney, Denise White, Charles Bradley, Brosi Schipanski, Meagan Alonso-Ayuso, Maria Hunter, Mitch Burgess, Mac Mejia, Catalina PLoS One Research Article Cover crops have the potential to be agricultural nitrogen (N) regulators that reduce leaching through soils and then deliver N to subsequent cash crops. Yet, regulating N in this way has proven difficult because the few cover crop species that are well-studied excel at either reducing N leaching or increasing N supply to cash crops, but they fail to excel at both simultaneously. We hypothesized that mixed species cover crop stands might balance the N fixing and N scavenging capabilities of individual species. We tested six cover crop monocultures and four mixtures for their effects on N cycling in an organically managed maize-soybean-wheat feed grain rotation in Pennsylvania, USA. For three years, we used a suite of integrated approaches to quantify N dynamics, including extractable soil inorganic N, buried anion exchange resins, bucket lysimeters, and plant N uptake. All cover crop species, including legume monocultures, reduced N leaching compared to fallow plots. Cereal rye monocultures reduced N leaching to buried resins by 90% relative to fallow; notably, mixtures with just a low seeding rate of rye did almost as well. Austrian winter pea monocultures increased N uptake in maize silage by 40 kg N ha(-1) relative to fallow, and conversely rye monocultures decreased N uptake into maize silage by 40 kg N ha(-1) relative to fallow. Importantly, cover crop mixtures had larger impacts on leaching reduction than on maize N uptake, when compared to fallow plots. For example, a three-species mixture of pea, red clover, and rye had similar maize N uptake to fallow plots, but leaching rates were 80% lower in this mixture than fallow plots. Our results show clearly that cover crop species selection and mixture design can substantially mitigate tradeoffs between N retention and N supply to cash crops, providing a powerful tool for managing N in temperate cropping systems. Public Library of Science 2019-04-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6461281/ /pubmed/30978240 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215448 Text en © 2019 Kaye et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kaye, Jason
Finney, Denise
White, Charles
Bradley, Brosi
Schipanski, Meagan
Alonso-Ayuso, Maria
Hunter, Mitch
Burgess, Mac
Mejia, Catalina
Managing nitrogen through cover crop species selection in the U.S. mid-Atlantic
title Managing nitrogen through cover crop species selection in the U.S. mid-Atlantic
title_full Managing nitrogen through cover crop species selection in the U.S. mid-Atlantic
title_fullStr Managing nitrogen through cover crop species selection in the U.S. mid-Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed Managing nitrogen through cover crop species selection in the U.S. mid-Atlantic
title_short Managing nitrogen through cover crop species selection in the U.S. mid-Atlantic
title_sort managing nitrogen through cover crop species selection in the u.s. mid-atlantic
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6461281/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30978240
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215448
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