Inicio  /  Agronomy  /  Vol: 13 Par: 9 (2023)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Assessment and Application of EPIC in Simulating Upland Rice Productivity, Soil Water, and Nitrogen Dynamics under Different Nitrogen Applications and Planting Windows

Tajamul Hussain    
Hero T. Gollany    
David J. Mulla    
Zhao Ben    
Muhammad Tahir    
Syed Tahir Ata-Ul-Karim    
Ke Liu    
Saliha Maqbool    
Nurda Hussain and Saowapa Duangpan    

Resumen

A suitable nitrogen (N) application rate (NAR) and ideal planting period could improve upland rice productivity, enhance the soil water utilization, and reduce N losses. This study was conducted for the assessment and application of the EPIC model to simulate upland rice productivity, soil water, and N dynamics under different NARs and planting windows (PWs). The nitrogen treatments were 30 (N30), 60 (N60), and 90 (N90) kg N ha-1 with a control (no N applied -N0). Planting was performed as early (PW1), moderately delayed (PW2), and delayed (PW3) between September and December of each growing season. The NAR and PW impacted upland rice productivity and the EPIC model predicted grain yield, aboveground biomass, and harvest index for all NARs in all PWs with a normalized good?excellent root mean square error (RMSEn) of 7.4?9.4%, 9.9?12.2%, and 2.3?12.4% and d-index range of 0.90?0.98, 0.87?0.94, and 0.89?0.91 for the grain yield, aboveground biomass, and harvest index, respectively. For grain and total plant N uptake, RMSEn ranged fair to excellent with values ranging from 10.3 to 22.8% and from 6.9 to 28.1%, and a d-index of 0.87?0.97 and 0.73?0.99, respectively. Evapotranspiration was slightly underestimated for all NARs at all PWs in both seasons with excellent RMSEn ranging from 2.0 to 3.1% and a d-index ranging from 0.65 to 0.97. A comparison of N and water balance components indicated that PW was the major factor impacting N and water losses as compared to NAR. There was a good agreement between simulated and observed soil water contents, and the model was able to estimate fluctuations in soil water contents. An adjustment in the planting window would be necessary for improved upland rice productivity, enhanced N, and soil water utilization to reduce N and soil water losses. Our results indicated that a well-calibrated EPIC model has the potential to identify suitable N and seasonal planting management options.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Peipei Chen, Jianguo Dai, Guoshun Zhang, Wenqing Hou, Zhengyang Mu and Yujuan Cao    
Nitrogen plays a crucial role in cotton growth, making the precise diagnosis of its nutrition levels vital for the scientific and rational application of fertilizers. Addressing this need, our study introduced an EMRDFC-based diagnosis model specifically... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Harold van Es    
Among essential crop nutrients, nitrogen is the greatest management challenge in maize (Zea mays L.) production due to high requisite rates as well as dynamic transformations and losses. Climate plays a role in N management through changes in crop calend... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Elzbieta Wszelaczynska, Jaroslaw Poberezny, Katarzyna Goscinna, Katarzyna Retmanska and Wojciech Jan Kozera    
Parsley is an herb/vegetable rich in nutritional compounds such as carbohydrates, vitamins, protein, crude fiber, minerals (especially potassium), phosphorus, magnesium, calcium, iron, and essential oils. Limited information is available in the literatur... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Nianbing Zhou, Yanhong Zhang, Tong Sun, Jinyan Zhu, Jinlong Hu and Qiangqiang Xiong    
We investigated the variations in metabolites associated with the quality of rice consumption when exposed to varying nitrogen fertilizer levels, as well as the regulatory role of pivotal metabolites within metabolic pathways. This research employed Hong... ver más
Revista: Agronomy

 
Xianguan Chen, Huiqing Bai, Qingyu Xue, Jin Zhao, Chuang Zhao and Liping Feng    
This project aims to improve the wheat growth and development simulation model (WheatSM) V4.0, a renowned wheat model, by addressing limitations in its structure and modules. The WheatSM V4.0 excelled numerically but lacked modularity, hindering maintena... ver más
Revista: Agronomy