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      Precrop Functional Group Identity Affects Yield of Winter Barley but Less so High Carbon Amendments in a Mesocosm Experiment

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          Abstract

          Nitrate leaching is a pressing environmental problem in intensive agriculture. Especially after the crop harvest, leaching risk is greatest due to decomposing plant residues, and low plant nutrient uptake and evapotranspiration. The specific crop also matters: grain legumes and canola commonly result in more leftover N than the following winter crop can take up before spring. Addition of a high carbon amendment (HCA) could potentially immobilize N after harvest. We set up a 2-year mesocosm experiment to test the effects of N fertilization (40 or 160 kg N/ha), HCA addition (no HCA, wheat straw, or sawdust), and precrop plant functional group identity on winter barley yield and soil C/N ratio. Four spring precrops were sown before winter barley (white lupine, faba bean, spring canola, spring barley), which were selected based on a functional group approach (colonization by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi [AMF] and/or N 2-fixing bacteria). We also measured a subset of faba bean and spring barley for leaching over winter after harvest. As expected, N fertilization had the largest effect on winter barley yield, but precrop functional identity also significantly affected the outcome. The non-AMF precrops white lupine and canola had on average a positive effect on yield compared to the AMF precrops spring barley and faba bean under high N (23% increase). Under low N, we found only a small precrop effect. Sawdust significantly reduced the yield compared to the control or wheat straw under either N level. HCAs reduced nitrate leaching over winter, but only when faba bean was sown as a precrop. In our setup, short-term immobilization of N by HCA addition after harvest seems difficult to achieve. However, other effects such as an increase in SOM or nutrient retention could play a positive role in the long term. Contrary to the commonly found positive effect of AMF colonization, winter barley showed a greater yield when it followed a non-AMF precrop under high fertilization. This could be due to shifts of the agricultural AMF community toward parasitism.

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          Expansion and intensification of cultivation are among the predominant global changes of this century. Intensification of agriculture by use of high-yielding crop varieties, fertilization,irrigation, and pesticides has contributed substantially to the tremendous increases in food production over the past 50 years. Land conversion and intensification,however, also alter the biotic interactions and patterns of resource availability in ecosystems and can have serious local, regional, and global environmental consequences.The use of ecologically based management strategies can increase the sustainability of agricultural production while reducing off-site consequences.
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              Agronomic phosphorus imbalances across the world's croplands.

              Increased phosphorus (P) fertilizer use and livestock production has fundamentally altered the global P cycle. We calculated spatially explicit P balances for cropland soils at 0.5° resolution based on the principal agronomic P inputs and outputs associated with production of 123 crops globally for the year 2000. Although agronomic inputs of P fertilizer (14.2 Tg of P·y(-1)) and manure (9.6 Tg of P·y(-1)) collectively exceeded P removal by harvested crops (12.3 Tg of P·y(-1)) at the global scale, P deficits covered almost 30% of the global cropland area. There was massive variation in the magnitudes of these P imbalances across most regions, particularly Europe and South America. High P fertilizer application relative to crop P use resulted in a greater proportion of the intense P surpluses (>13 kg of P·ha(-1)·y(-1)) globally than manure P application. High P fertilizer application was also typically associated with areas of relatively low P-use efficiency. Although manure was an important driver of P surpluses in some locations with high livestock densities, P deficits were common in areas producing forage crops used as livestock feed. Resolving agronomic P imbalances may be possible with more efficient use of P fertilizers and more effective recycling of manure P. Such reforms are needed to increase global agricultural productivity while maintaining or improving freshwater quality.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Front Plant Sci
                Front Plant Sci
                Front. Plant Sci.
                Frontiers in Plant Science
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1664-462X
                03 July 2018
                2018
                : 9
                : 912
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Institute of Ecology, Leuphana University of Lüneburg , Lüneburg, Germany
                [2] 2Institut für Biologie, Ökologie der Pflanzen, Freie Universität Berlin , Berlin, Germany
                [3] 3Berlin-Brandenburg Institute of Advanced Biodiversity Research , Berlin, Germany
                Author notes

                Edited by: Arne Sæbø, Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO), Norway

                Reviewed by: Cándido López-Castaõeda, Colegio de Postgraduados (COLPOS), Mexico; Agnieszka Klimek-Kopyra, University of Agriculture in Krakow, Poland

                *Correspondence: Vicky M. Temperton, vicky.temperton@ 123456leuphana.de

                This article was submitted to Plant Breeding, a section of the journal Frontiers in Plant Science

                Article
                10.3389/fpls.2018.00912
                6037990
                30018627
                ca6d4663-7d61-4ff1-844e-e6a9bda71714
                Copyright © 2018 van Duijnen, Roy, Härdtle and Temperton.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 16 March 2018
                : 08 June 2018
                Page count
                Figures: 5, Tables: 3, Equations: 0, References: 49, Pages: 12, Words: 0
                Funding
                Funded by: Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung 10.13039/501100002347
                Award ID: 031A561A-H
                Categories
                Plant Science
                Original Research

                Plant science & Botany
                crop rotation,arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi,rhizobia,barley,high carbon amendment,immobilization,plant functional group,nitrate leaching

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