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中级

E-Mail:

Date of Employment:2020-11-12

School/Department:水利科学与工程学院

Education Level:With Certificate of Graduation for Doctorate Study

Business Address:江苏省扬州市江阳中路131号扬州大学江阳路南校区

Gender:Male

Contact Information:liu.wenlong@yzu.edu.cn

Degree:Doctoral Degree in Philosophy

Status:Employed

Alma Mater:North Carolina State Univeristy

Discipline:Hydrology and Water Resources
Agricultural Soil and Water Engineering

Wenlong Liu

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Gender:Male

Education Level:With Certificate of Graduation for Doctorate Study

Alma Mater:North Carolina State Univeristy

Paper Publications

Seismic Response Meta-model of High-Rise Fame Structure Based on Time-Delay Neural Network

DOI number:10.13031/trans.14078
Journal:Transactions of ASABE
Place of Publication:USA
Key Words:Conservation practice, Corn yields, Cost-effectiveness, NO3-N loss, Nutrient management, Subsurface drainage, Midwest U.S.
Abstract:Nutrient management, as described in NRCS Code 590, has been intensively investigated, with research largely focused on crop yields and water quality. Yet, due to complex processes and mechanisms in nutrient cycling (especially the nitrogen (N) cycle), there are many challenges in evaluating the effectiveness of nutrient management practices across site conditions. We therefore synthesized data from peer-reviewed publications on subsurface-drained agricultural fields in the Midwest U.S. with corn yield and drainage nitrate-N (NO3-N) export data published from 1980 to 2019. Through literature screening and data extraction from 43 publications, we obtained 577 site-years of data with detailed information on fertilization, corn yields, precipitation, drainage volume, and drainage NO3-N load/concentration or both. In addition, we estimated flow-weighted NO3-N concentrations ([NO3-N]) in drainage for those site-years where only load and volume were reported. Furthermore, we conducted a cost analysis using synthesized and surveyed corn yield data to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of different nutrient management plans. Results from the synthesis showed that N fertilizer rate was strongly positively correlated with corn yields, NO3-N loads, and flow-weighted [NO3-N]. Reducing N fertilizer rates can effectively mitigate NO3-N losses from agricultural fields; however, our cost analysis showed negative economic returns for continuous corn production at lower N rates. In addition, organic fertilizers significantly boosted corn yields and NO3-N losses compared to inorganic fertilizers at comparable rates; however, accurate quantification of plant-available N in organic fertilizers is necessary to guide appropriate nutrient management plans because the nutrient content may be highly variable. In terms of fertilizer application methods, we did not find significant differences in NO3-N export in drainage discharge. Lastly, impact of fertilization timing on NO3-N export varied depending on other factors such as fertilizer rate, source, and weather. According to these results, we suggest that further efforts are still required to produce effective local nutrient management plans. Furthermore, government agencies such as USDA-NRCS need to work with other agencies such as USEPA to address the potential economic losses due to implementation of lower fertilizer rates for water quality improvement.
Co-author:Lydia Koropeckyj-Cox
First Author:Wenlong Liu
Indexed by:SCI、
Correspondence Author:Yongping Yuan
Discipline:Engineering
First-Level Discipline:Agricultural Engineering
Document Type:journalArticle
Volume:64
Issue:2
Page Number:675-689
Translation or Not:no
Date of Publication:2021-05-01
Included Journals:SCI
Links to published journals:https://elibrary.asabe.org/abstract.asp?AID=52171&t=3&dabs=Y&redir=&redirType=