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A data-driven approach for devising and assessing precision nitrogen management strategies applied to wheat systems in India

By: Contributor(s): Material type: ArticleLanguage: English Publication details: United Kingdom : IOP Publishing Ltd, 2025.ISSN:
  • 2976-601X
Subject(s): Online resources: In: Environmental Research: Food Systems United Kingdom : IOP Publishing Ltd., 2025. v. 2 , no. 4, art. 045007Summary: Limiting nitrogen pollution from crop production is essential for mitigating greenhouse gas emissions and protecting aquatic ecosystems while maintaining food security. Precision nitrogen management (PNM) provides a conceptual framework for achieving yield goals while maintaining nitrogen pollution within planetary boundaries by matching fertilizer rates to specific production conditions. Nevertheless, PNM strategies for smallholder contexts like India, a global nitrogen pollution hotspot, have proven costly to implement and are often ineffective. By combining survey data of production practices from 8705 wheat fields with digital soil mapping, we develop a novel PNM strategy that ‘learns from landscapes’ to generate and evaluate novel decision logic for nitrogen management. With this approach, ex-ante simulations indicate that reductions of 9% in nitrogen use and 16% in N2O emissions can be achieved without compromising yields, saving US$ 28 million per year in subsidies for the Indian state of Bihar alone. In contrast, conventional soil test-based recommendations may increase nitrogen use by 5% without corresponding yield gains. Our method that leverages large-n survey data and predictive modeling may provide a scalable pathway for PNM in similarly complex crop production environments where field and management heterogeneity is high.
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Limiting nitrogen pollution from crop production is essential for mitigating greenhouse gas emissions and protecting aquatic ecosystems while maintaining food security. Precision nitrogen management (PNM) provides a conceptual framework for achieving yield goals while maintaining nitrogen pollution within planetary boundaries by matching fertilizer rates to specific production conditions. Nevertheless, PNM strategies for smallholder contexts like India, a global nitrogen pollution hotspot, have proven costly to implement and are often ineffective. By combining survey data of production practices from 8705 wheat fields with digital soil mapping, we develop a novel PNM strategy that ‘learns from landscapes’ to generate and evaluate novel decision logic for nitrogen management. With this approach, ex-ante simulations indicate that reductions of 9% in nitrogen use and 16% in N2O emissions can be achieved without compromising yields, saving US$ 28 million per year in subsidies for the Indian state of Bihar alone. In contrast, conventional soil test-based recommendations may increase nitrogen use by 5% without corresponding yield gains. Our method that leverages large-n survey data and predictive modeling may provide a scalable pathway for PNM in similarly complex crop production environments where field and management heterogeneity is high.

Text in English

Kumar, V. : No CIMMYT Affiliation

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) Climate adaptation & mitigation Environmental health & biodiversity Poverty reduction, livelihoods & jobs Excellence in Agronomy Resilient Agrifood Systems

https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179017

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