Journal of Integrative Agriculture (Mar 2024)
Combining field data and modeling to better understand maize growth response to phosphorus (P) fertilizer application and soil P dynamics in calcareous soils
Abstract
We used field experimental data to evaluate the ability of the agricultural production system model (APSIM) to simulate soil P availability, maize biomass and grain yield in response to P fertilizer applications on a fluvo-aquic soil in the North China Plain. Crop and soil data from a 2-year experiment with three P fertilizer application rates (0, 75 and 300 kg P2O5 ha−1) were used to calibrate the model. Sensitivity analysis was carried out to investigate the influence of APSIM SoilP parameters on the simulated P availability in soil and maize growth. Crop and soil P parameters were then derived by matching or relating the simulation results to observed crop biomass, yield, P uptake and Olsen-P in soil. The re-parameterized model was further validated against 2 years of independent data at the same sites. The re-parameterized model enabled good simulation of the maize leaf area index (LAI), biomass, grain yield, P uptake, and grain P content in response to different levels of P additions against both the calibration and validation datasets. Our results showed that APSIM needs to be re-parameterized for simulation of maize LAI dynamics through modification of leaf size curve and a reduction in the rate of leaf senescence for modern stay-green maize cultivars in China. The P concentration limits (maximum and minimum P concentrations in organs) at different stages also need to be adjusted. Our results further showed a curvilinear relationship between the measured Olsen-P concentration and simulated labile P content, which could facilitate the initialization of APSIM P pools in the NCP with Olsen-P measurements in future studies. It remains difficult to parameterize the APSIM SoilP module due to the conceptual nature of the pools and simplified conceptualization of key P transformation processes. A fundamental understanding still needs to be developed for modelling and predicting the fate of applied P fertilizers in soils with contrasting physical and chemical characteristics.