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Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology ›› 2022, Vol. 33 ›› Issue (3): 671-676.doi: 10.13287/j.1001-9332.202203.015

• Special Features of Black Soil Protection and Agricultural Sustainable Development • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Effects of long-term no-tillage and stover mulching on maize yield and its stability.

XU Xin1,2, WANG Xiao-ying3, BAO Xue-lian1,4, WANG Ying5, LIU Ya-jun5, HUO Hai-nan1,4, HE Hong-bo1,4, XIE Hong-tu1,4*   

  1. 1Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenyang 110016, China;
    2University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China;
    3Institute of Atmospheric Environment, China Meteorological Administration, Shen-yang 110166, China;
    4Key Lab of Conservation Tillage and Ecological Agriculture of Liaoning Province, Shenyang 110016, China;
    5Lishu Agricultural Technology Extension Station, Lishu 136500, Jilin, China
  • Received:2021-08-31 Accepted:2022-01-02 Online:2022-03-15 Published:2022-09-15

Abstract: Clarifying the differences of maize yield and its stability under long-term no-tillage with different stover mulching amounts can provide theoretical and technical supports for establishing and evaluating long-term conservation tillage pattern and promoting grain production. Based on a long-term conservation tillage field experiment in the mollisol area of Northeast China since 2007, we analyzed the interannual variation, variation coefficient and stability of maize yield during 2013 and 2019 across five treatments, i.e., no-tillage stover-free mulching (NT0), no-tillage with 33% stover mulching (NT33), no-tillage with 67% stover mulching (NT67) and no-tillage with 100% stover mulching (NT100), with the traditional ridge cropping (RT) as the control. The results showed that compared with RT, long-term no-tillage with stover mulching treatments could increase maize yield. NT100 had the highest increasing rate of 11.4%, followed by NT67 and NT0, with the increasing rate of 11.0% and 10.4%, respectively. Maize yield exhibited a nonlinear relationship with the amount of stover mulch. The variation coefficient of maize yield under multi-year no-tillage with different stover mulching could be sorted as NT67<RT<NT100<NT33<NT0, and the yield sustainability index was NT67>NT0>NT100>RT>NT33, indicating that NT67 treatment could significantly reduce the interannual fluctuation of maize yield and had better sustainability of yield. No-tillage stover mulching significantly increased soil total carbon and total nitrogen contents, which were significantly positively correlated with maize yield. In conclusion, compared with traditional tillage, no-tillage stover mulching could increase maize yield and soil carbon and nitrogen contents. Appropriate stover mulching (NT67)had the potential to improve the stability and sustainability of maize yield.

Key words: no tillage, maize stover mulch, maize yield, yield stability