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An increase in intercropped species richness improves plant water use but weakens the nutrient status of both intercropped plants and soil in rubber-tea agroforestry systems
Zhao, Fan; Yang, Bin; Zhu, Xiai; Ma, Sha1; Xie, Enhong1; Zeng, Huanhuan2; Li, Chao3; Wu, Junen1
2023
Source PublicationAGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT
ISSN0378-3774
Volume284Issue:xPages:-
AbstractAs a relatively successful agroforestry system, whether the addition of more intercropped species in the rubber-tea agroforestry system extends the benefits is still unknown but worth exploring because diverse cash crop production helps farmers resist market risks and may bring the ecological functions of rubber agroforestry systems closer to those of natural forests. Therefore, understanding the effects of plant interspecific competition on both plants and soil with the increase in intercropped species number in such agroforestry systems is vital for the improvement of rubber-tea agroforestry systems. For these reasons, we selected a monocultural rubber plantation, rubber-tea, rubber-orange-tea and jungle-like rubber-tea agroforestry systems for studying plant water absorbing patterns, plant water use efficiency, and the nutrient status of plants and soil through stable isotope (13C, 2H and 18O) techniques and nutrient diagnosis (C, N, P, K, Ca and Mg) of plant organs (leaves, stems and roots), soil and litter. We found that rubber trees primarily absorbed water from deeper soil layers with increases in their intercropped species number and the formation of increasingly obvious hydrologic niche differentiation between rubber trees and the intercropped plants. In addition, soil nutrient status first improved but then declined with an increase in the number of intercropped species. However, only a slight impact was observed on the nutrient status and water use efficiency of rubber trees, even in the complex rubber-tea agroforestry system. However, the intercropped species experienced resource shortages, especially P shortages, since their water-absorbing zones almost overlapped. Therefore, we suggest that more diverse intercropped species compositions in rubber-tea agroforestry systems would offset the intercropping benefits for both plants and soil. However, appropriate phosphate fertilizer application in complex agroforestry systems is necessary if the construction of high-species richness rubber agroforestry systems is desired.
KeywordAgroforestry system Hydrological niche Nutrient diagnosis Plant competition Plant-soil interaction Stable isotopic tracer
Subject AreaAgronomy ; Water Resources
DOI10.1016/j.agwat.2023.108353
Indexed BySCI
Language英语
WOS IDWOS:001020717500001
Citation statistics
Document Type期刊论文
Identifierhttps://ir.xtbg.ac.cn/handle/353005/13650
Collection2012年后新成立研究组
Affiliation1.Chinese Acad Sci, CAS Key Lab Trop Forest Ecol, Xishuangbanna Trop Bot Garden, Menglun 666303, Yunnan, Peoples R China
2.Yunnan Normal Univ, Fac Geog, Kunming 650050, Yunnan, Peoples R China
3.Jiangxi Acad Forestry, Nanchang 330013, Jiangxi, Peoples R China
4.Kunming 10 High Sch, Kunming 650051, Yunnan, Peoples R China
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Zhao, Fan,Yang, Bin,Zhu, Xiai,et al. An increase in intercropped species richness improves plant water use but weakens the nutrient status of both intercropped plants and soil in rubber-tea agroforestry systems[J]. AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT,2023,284(x):-.
APA Zhao, Fan.,Yang, Bin.,Zhu, Xiai.,Ma, Sha.,Xie, Enhong.,...&Wu, Junen.(2023).An increase in intercropped species richness improves plant water use but weakens the nutrient status of both intercropped plants and soil in rubber-tea agroforestry systems.AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT,284(x),-.
MLA Zhao, Fan,et al."An increase in intercropped species richness improves plant water use but weakens the nutrient status of both intercropped plants and soil in rubber-tea agroforestry systems".AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT 284.x(2023):-.
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