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Are Recommended Fertilizer Rates Able to Maintain Nutrient Balance in Soil and Optimize Crop Profit in Intensive Rice-Based Crop Rotations: Evidence from a 20-Year Study
Journal article

Are Recommended Fertilizer Rates Able to Maintain Nutrient Balance in Soil and Optimize Crop Profit in Intensive Rice-Based Crop Rotations: Evidence from a 20-Year Study

Utpol Kumar, Miaomiao Cheng, M. Jahedul Islam, M. Maniruzzaman, Shah Shanjida Nasreen, M. Enamul Haque, Sohela Akhter, M. Jahiruddin, Richard W. Bell and M. M. R. Jahangir
Journal of soil science and plant nutrition
2025

Abstract

Nutrients Budget Organic Carbon Residue Retention Soil Health
Sustenance of soil fertility is a key challenge in intensive rice farming in subtropical agro-ecosystems due to unbalanced fertilization. Recommended fertilizer rates are assumed to optimize crop productivity but their effects on the maintenance of long-term soil fertility are not well studied. A long-term field experiment was evaluated for crop yield and soil properties after crop 54 and crop 60 of continuous practice with six treatments that varied the supply of N, P and K relative to current recommended rates (RFD - specified N, P, K, S, Zn and B fertilizer doses) and a zero-added fertilizer for an annual mustard-mungbean-rice rotation. Soil nutrient contents, organic carbon (SOC) and bulk density (BD) were determined at different soil depths. Long-term RFD maintained the annual N balance (0.7 kg ha− 1), produced positive P (17.2 kg ha− 1) and S (22.9 kg ha− 1) balances but negative K balance (-140 kg ha− 1) in soils with the highest system rice equivalent yield (13.3 t ha− 1) and marginal benefit cost ratio (9.6). The SOC, TN and extractable nutrients were higher in RFD than with higher doses except extractable P which was increased by higher P. While long-term RFD was the most profitable for crop production and achieved a neutral N balance between inputs and outputs, it caused soil K depletion and P and S accumulation. Our results give insights into the modifications to the RFD that better maintain not only yield and crop profitability but also long-term soil fertility.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
3.45 Soil Science
3.45.112 Soil Carbon Dynamics
Web Of Science research areas
Environmental Sciences
Plant Sciences
Soil Science
ESI research areas
Agricultural Sciences
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