Cutting carbon footprints of vegetable production with integrated soil - crop system management: A case study of greenhouse pepper production

2020 
Abstract In China there is an urgent need to improve the sustainability of vegetable production by increasing yields and reducing the environmental losses. However, whilst various single nutrient management measures have proved successful at reducing environmental losses, they have not simultaneously increased yield. Here, we report on a three-year field experiment that used an integrated soil - crop system management (ISSM) approach, to improve crop (pepper) yield and to cut carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) footprints of greenhouse vegetable production in the Yangtze River Basin, China. Treatments included farmers’ practice (FP) for nutrient inputs, soil and crop management; soil remediation (SR), as a single factor approach to optimize soil management, including control of soil borne pathogens and reduced nutrient input by organic resources; and ISSM, as a systematic integrated approach, which includes the combined optimization of factors, including soil remediation, reduced planting density, and improved timing of inorganic fertilizer applications (rate and form). Measurements of pepper yield and N concentrations were used to calculate N offtake, and the C and N footprints were then calculated using life cycle assessment. The three-year continuous field experiment indicated that the mean pepper yield (fresh weight) from the ISSM treatments were 48 t ha−1, 17% and 10% greater than that of the FP and SR treatments (p
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