Reversal of Rice Yield Decline in a Long‐Term Continuous Cropping Experiment
- 1 July 2000
- journal article
- soil fertility
- Published by Wiley in Agronomy Journal
- Vol. 92 (4) , 633-643
- https://doi.org/10.2134/agronj2000.924633x
Abstract
In a long‐term continuous cropping experiment at Los Baños, Philippines, three rice (Oryza sativa L.) crops were grown each year with the goals of maximum annual grain production and high N use efficiency. Our objective was to identify the factors responsible for the restoration of yields occurring after 1991. From 1968 to 1991, grain yields declined at an annual rate of 1.4 to 2.0%. From 1991 to 1995, dry season (DS) yields in the highest N treatment increased to within 80 to 100% of the simulated yield potential; yields in the unfertilized control did not increase. Increased solar radiation, increased N rate, and improved timing of N applications accounted for the restoration of yields in the DS. Wet season yields increased in fertilized and unfertilized plots due to greater solar radiation, improved timing of N applications, and increased soil N supply due to dry fallow periods in three years. Residual benefits of soil aeration were short‐term. Reducing preplant N fertilizer and increasing the number of split applications had a greater effect on increasing yield than the increase in the amount of N applied. Our results provide evidence that N deficiency caused the yield decline before 1991. However, the actual processes that caused a decline in soil N supply or plant N uptake remain to be determined. It is possible to sustain high yields and high N use efficiency if fertilizer regimes are updated regularly to maintain the congruence between crop N demand and the N supply from soil and fertilizer.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- How widespread are yield declines in long-term rice experiments in Asia?Field Crops Research, 2000
- ORGANIC MATTER IN DOUBLE-CROPPED LOWLAND RICE SOILS: CHEMICAL AND SPECTROSCOPIC PROPERTIESSoil Science, 1999
- Conserved chemical properties of young humic acid fractions in tropical lowland soil under intensive irrigated rice croppingEuropean Journal of Soil Science, 1998
- Opportunities for increased nitrogen-use efficiency from improved resource management in irrigated rice systemsField Crops Research, 1998
- Changes in chemical properties of organic matter with intensified rice cropping in tropical lowland soilEuropean Journal of Soil Science, 1996
- Nitrogen-use efficiency in tropical lowland rice systems: contributions from indigenous and applied nitrogenField Crops Research, 1996
- Effect of Sheath Blight on Yield in Tropical, Intensive Rice Production SystemPlant Disease, 1996
- Denitrification losses from puddled rice soils in the tropicsBiology and Fertility of Soils, 1990
- Contribution of ammonia volatilization to total nitrogen loss after applications of urea to wetland rice fieldsNutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems, 1986
- Trends in irrigated-rice yields under intensive cropping at Philippine research stationsField Crops Research, 1984