Abstrakt: |
Water table control‐subiriggation (WTC) systems have increased crop production and improved water quality; however, the relationship between N management, water table depths, and corn production has not been well defined. We hypothesized that optimizing water table depth would increase corn (Zea maysL.) growth, improve N fertilizer efficiency, and reduce NO‐3losses. A greenhouse incubation study with three water table depths (30, 60, and 80 cm) and four N rates (0, 0.7, 1.4, and 2.1 g N plant‐1) was conducted using undisturbed soil columns (Fox sandy loam, Typic Hapludalf) planted to corn. The 30‐cm WTC treatment had the greatest NO‐3loss through tile drainage (715 µg N column‐1). The 60‐cm WTC treatment reduced these losses by 54%. Nitrate losses through tile drainage were proportional to drainage volume, which followed the order 30 cm > 60 cm > 80 cm WTC. The 60‐cm WTC treatment increased crop yields (95 g plant‐1) compared with the 30‐cm (68 g plant‐1) and 80‐cm WTC (18 g plant‐1) treatments at the optimal N rate of 1.4 g N plant‐1. After the first simulated rainfall event, N2O production was increased by 12.7 times with the 30‐cm WTC treatment (825 µg N column‐1d‐1) compared with the 60‐ and 80‐cm WTC treatments. Water stress imposed by the 80‐cm WTC treatment limited crop growth, N uptake, leaching, and N2O emissions. However, up to 28% of added N (664 mg N column‐1) remained in the soil after corn was harvested from the 80‐cm WTC treatment, which would be susceptible to leaching between cropping seasons. |