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Wenxin Zhang

Researcher

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Ridge planting with transparent plastic mulching improves maize productivity by regulating the distribution and utilization of soil water, heat, and canopy radiation in arid irrigation area

Author

  • Cheng Li
  • Xiaoqi Luo
  • Yue Li
  • Naijiang Wang
  • Tibin Zhang
  • Qin'ge Dong
  • Hao Feng
  • Wenxin Zhang
  • Kadambot H.M. Siddique

Summary, in English

Ridge-furrow mulching system is widely used for improving soil hydrothermal conditions and crop productivity in semiarid and arid rainfed areas. The response of crop productivity to resource capture and utilization is crucial for agricultural field management and sustainable development. However, few have simultaneously investigated the coupling effect of plastic film mulching (PM) types and planting patterns on root and shoot growth, photosynthesis, yield, resource capture and utilization as well as their potential links in the same experiment, especially in arid irrigation areas, limiting our understanding of PM and ridge planting application. This study conducted a two-year field experiment with four treatments: 1) flat planting with transparent plastic film mulch (FT); 2) flat planting with black plastic film mulch (FB); 3) ridge–furrow planting with transparent plastic film mulch (RT); 4) ridge–furrow planting with black plastic film mulch (RB). The results showed that RT significantly increased soil water storage and root growth at the silking and grain-filling stages in both years by enhancing soil thermal time with 151.9–176.2 °C d and the intercepted photosynthetic active radiation with 22.2–57.4 MJ m–2. In addition, RT had a significantly higher net photosynthetic rate than FT and FB at the 12-leaf and silking stages, enhancing the transportation of stem and leaf to grain. The logistic equation using growing degree days as the independent variable characterized the dynamic features of maize growth under different PM types (transparent or black) coupled with ridge–furrow planting. RT accelerated dry matter accumulation by enhancing the maximum growth rate and extending the rapid growth period, resulting in 12.9–15.2 % more dry matter accumulation and 10.0–16.7 % higher grain yields than FB. Furthermore, RT significantly increased resource use efficiencies by 10.1–17.3 % for water, 3.0–5.5 % for thermal, and 4.0–9.1 % for radiation compared with FB. Ridge planting had the highest contributor rates, with >40 % for yield and resource capture. This study suggests that RT maintains high maize productivity and resource use efficiencies in arid irrigation areas with limited water resources by regulating soil water, heat, and canopy radiation distribution and utilization.

Department/s

  • Dept of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science
  • BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
  • MERGE: ModElling the Regional and Global Earth system

Publishing year

2023-04-30

Language

English

Publication/Series

Agricultural Water Management

Volume

280

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Agricultural Science
  • Soil Science

Keywords

  • Biomass transportation
  • Contributor rate
  • Logistic equation
  • Resources utilization
  • Ridge-mulched and furrow irrigation system

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0378-3774