Agronomic performance and remote sensing assessment of organic and mineral fertilization in rice fields

Abstract

Introduction: Rice heavily relies on nitrogen fertilizers, posing environmental, resource, and geopolitical challenges. This study explores sustainable alternatives like animal manure and remote sensing for resource-efficient rice cultivation. It aims to assess the long-term impact of organic fertilization and remote sensing monitoring on agronomic traits, yield, and nutrition. Methods: A six-year experiment in rice fields evaluated fertilization strategies, including pig slurry (PS) and chicken manure (CM) with mineral fertilizers (MIN), MIN-only, and zero-fertilization. Traits, yield, spectral responses, and nutrient content were measured. Sentinel-2 remote sensing tracked crop development. Results: Cost-effective organic fertilizers (PS and CM) caused a 13% and 15% yield reduction but still doubled zero-fertilization yield. PS reduced nitrogen leaching. Heavy metals in rice grains were present at safe amounts. Organic-fertilized crops showed nitrogen deficiency at the late vegetative stages, affecting yield. Sentinel-2 detected nutrient deficiencies through NDVI. Discussion: Organic fertilizers, especially PS, reduce nitrogen loss, benefiting the environment. However, they come with yield trade-offs and nutrient management challenges that can be managed and balanced with reduced additional mineral applications. Sentinel-2 remote sensing helps manage nutrient deficiencies. In summary, this research favors cost-effective organic fertilizers with improved nutrient management for sustainable rice production.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

19

Publisher

Frontiers Media

Published in

Frontiers in Plant Science

Grant Agreement Number

MICINN/Programa Estatal para impulsar la investigación científico-técnica y su transferencia/TED2021-131606B-C21/ES/ /

MICINN/Programa Estatal de I+D+I orientada a los retos de la sociedad/PLEC2021-007786/ES/Estrategias integradas para el desarrollo de un sistema de producción sostenible de arroz: desarrollo de nuevas herramientas para promover la transición agroecológica/BestRice

EC/H2020/101000847/EU/Climate Resilient Orphan croPs for increased DIVersity in Agriculture/CROPDIVA

Recommended citation

Marti-Jerez, Karen, Mar Català-Forner, Núria Tomàs, Gemma Murillo, Carlos Ortiz, María José Sánchez-Torres, Andrea Vitali, Marta S. Lopes. 2023. “Agronomic performance and remote sensing assessment of organic and mineral fertilization in rice fields”. Frontiers in Plant Science 14. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1230012

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Attribution 4.0 International

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