Incorporation of maize crop residue maintains soybean yield through the stimulation of nitrogen fixation rather than residue-derived nitrogen in Mollisols
posted on 2025-05-23, 01:04authored byZhihuang Xie, Y Li, Z Yu, G Wang, Caixian TangCaixian Tang, U Mathesius, X Liu, Junjie Liu, J Liu, SJ Herbert, J Wu, Jian JinJian Jin
Crop residue amendment to soil is recommended as an effective management practice to return nutrients, especially in the maize-soybean rotation system where large amounts of maize residues are produced. Quantifying the utilisation of maize-residue N by the subsequent soybean crop is essential for optimising the N fertilisation strategy for sustainable production. However, whether and how maize residue amendment alters N acquisition in soybean plants are largely unknown. It was hypothesised that maize residue would supply N and enhance N2 fixation to meet the N requirements of subsequent soybeans. Three treatments, namely: 1) chemical fertiliser (55.2, 35.2 and 22.4 kg ha−1 of N, P and K, respectively), 2) maize residue (8 t ha−1), and 3) non-fertiliser were applied in a maize-soybean rotation system in a Mollisol soil. It was demonstrated that soybean seed yield in the maize-residue treatment was the same as that in the chemical fertiliser treatment, with 2.9 vs. 3.2 t ha−1 in 2014, 2.7 vs. 2.6 t ha−1 in 2016, and 3.0 vs. 3.1 t ha−1 in 2018. A follow-up pot experiment using 15N-labelled residue indicated that the residue-derived N accounted for 0.5 % of the total N in soybean seeds and the proportion of symbiotically fixed N reached 82 %. The amount of fixed N during the pod-filling period in the residue treatment was 0.66 g plant-1, which was 49 % and 41 % higher than those in the chemical fertiliser and non-fertiliser treatments, respectively. The stimulation of N2 fixation was associated with an increase in fixed N per nodule and the enrichment of diazotrophs in the rhizosphere of soybean. With maize residue amendment, the increased N2-fixing capability of nodules during the reproductive period, rather than residue-derived N, fulfilled the N demand for maintaining seed yield of soybean. In the maize-soybean rotation system, maize residue amendment would facilitate the N2 fixation to partly substitute for N fertiliser for soybean production in Mollisols.
Funding
The project was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41771326), the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDA28020201), and La Trobe University Research Focus Area (RFA) project(2000002982).