Assessing the effects of management and hydro-edaphic conditions on rice in contrasting East African wetlands using experimental and modelling approaches

Lowland rice yields in East Africa remain low despite favourable hydro-edaphic conditions as benefits from improved cultural management vary between and within wetland types and interactions are poorly understood. Hence, multi-year agronomic field experiments were established to assess the different...

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Main Authors: Grotelüschen, Kristina, Gaydon, D.S., Langensiepen, M., Ziegler, S., Kwesiga, J., Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu, Whitbread, Anthony M., Becker, M.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116037
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author Grotelüschen, Kristina
Gaydon, D.S.
Langensiepen, M.
Ziegler, S.
Kwesiga, J.
Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu
Whitbread, Anthony M.
Becker, M.
author_browse Becker, M.
Gaydon, D.S.
Grotelüschen, Kristina
Kwesiga, J.
Langensiepen, M.
Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu
Whitbread, Anthony M.
Ziegler, S.
author_facet Grotelüschen, Kristina
Gaydon, D.S.
Langensiepen, M.
Ziegler, S.
Kwesiga, J.
Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu
Whitbread, Anthony M.
Becker, M.
author_sort Grotelüschen, Kristina
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Lowland rice yields in East Africa remain low despite favourable hydro-edaphic conditions as benefits from improved cultural management vary between and within wetland types and interactions are poorly understood. Hence, multi-year agronomic field experiments were established to assess the differential responses of lowland rice to management (rainfed 0 and 60 kg N ha−1, and irrigated 120 kg N ha−1 + 60 kg PK ha−1) and field position within a floodplain in Tanzania (fringe and middle positions) and an inland valley in Uganda (valley-fringe, mid-valley and valley-bottom positions). We then calibrated and validated the Agricultural Production System Simulator (APSIM), evaluated the importance of external water table data as model input and assessed the relative effects of water and N stress on yield as affected by wetland type and field position. Yields of 3.2–9.2 Mg ha−1 were attained in the floodplain and of 1.9–6.3 Mg ha−1 in the inland valley, highlighting the substantial scope to boost yields beyond current regional means of around 2 Mg ha−1. The model estimated grain yields in both wetlands well within the experimental uncertainty during model validation (n = 12, r2 = 0.76, RMSEa= 0.92 Mg ha−1 in the floodplain; n = 18, r2 = 0.71, RMSEa= 0.72 Mg ha−1 in the inland valley). Results further emphasised the importance of external water table data for sound model performance as they evidently alleviated seasonal droughts. Simulated abiotic stress patterns additionally highlighted hydro-edaphic differences from field positioning within and between both wetlands. While low soil N was generally the main yield constraint, water stress was comparably more pronounced in the inland valley and supplemental irrigation thus more beneficial on yield. Hydro-edaphic field conditions favoured rice production in the floodplain’s fringe with comparably lower N stress, while large spatial-temporal variabilities prevented a distinct delineation based on toposequential field positions in the inland valley.
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spelling CGSpace1160372024-03-06T10:16:43Z Assessing the effects of management and hydro-edaphic conditions on rice in contrasting East African wetlands using experimental and modelling approaches Grotelüschen, Kristina Gaydon, D.S. Langensiepen, M. Ziegler, S. Kwesiga, J. Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu Whitbread, Anthony M. Becker, M. apsim floodplain inland valley oryza spp tanzania uganda research rice wetlands Lowland rice yields in East Africa remain low despite favourable hydro-edaphic conditions as benefits from improved cultural management vary between and within wetland types and interactions are poorly understood. Hence, multi-year agronomic field experiments were established to assess the differential responses of lowland rice to management (rainfed 0 and 60 kg N ha−1, and irrigated 120 kg N ha−1 + 60 kg PK ha−1) and field position within a floodplain in Tanzania (fringe and middle positions) and an inland valley in Uganda (valley-fringe, mid-valley and valley-bottom positions). We then calibrated and validated the Agricultural Production System Simulator (APSIM), evaluated the importance of external water table data as model input and assessed the relative effects of water and N stress on yield as affected by wetland type and field position. Yields of 3.2–9.2 Mg ha−1 were attained in the floodplain and of 1.9–6.3 Mg ha−1 in the inland valley, highlighting the substantial scope to boost yields beyond current regional means of around 2 Mg ha−1. The model estimated grain yields in both wetlands well within the experimental uncertainty during model validation (n = 12, r2 = 0.76, RMSEa= 0.92 Mg ha−1 in the floodplain; n = 18, r2 = 0.71, RMSEa= 0.72 Mg ha−1 in the inland valley). Results further emphasised the importance of external water table data for sound model performance as they evidently alleviated seasonal droughts. Simulated abiotic stress patterns additionally highlighted hydro-edaphic differences from field positioning within and between both wetlands. While low soil N was generally the main yield constraint, water stress was comparably more pronounced in the inland valley and supplemental irrigation thus more beneficial on yield. Hydro-edaphic field conditions favoured rice production in the floodplain’s fringe with comparably lower N stress, while large spatial-temporal variabilities prevented a distinct delineation based on toposequential field positions in the inland valley. 2021-12 2021-11-12T12:02:23Z 2021-11-12T12:02:23Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116037 en Limited Access Elsevier Grotelüschen, K. Gaydon, D.S. Langensiepen, M. Ziegler, S. Kwesiga, J. Senthilkumar, K. Whitbread, A.M. Becker, M.Assessing the effects of management and hydro-edaphic conditions on rice in contrasting East African wetlands using experimental and modelling approaches.Agricultural Water Management.2021, Volume 258 :107146.
spellingShingle apsim
floodplain
inland valley
oryza spp
tanzania
uganda
research
rice
wetlands
Grotelüschen, Kristina
Gaydon, D.S.
Langensiepen, M.
Ziegler, S.
Kwesiga, J.
Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu
Whitbread, Anthony M.
Becker, M.
Assessing the effects of management and hydro-edaphic conditions on rice in contrasting East African wetlands using experimental and modelling approaches
title Assessing the effects of management and hydro-edaphic conditions on rice in contrasting East African wetlands using experimental and modelling approaches
title_full Assessing the effects of management and hydro-edaphic conditions on rice in contrasting East African wetlands using experimental and modelling approaches
title_fullStr Assessing the effects of management and hydro-edaphic conditions on rice in contrasting East African wetlands using experimental and modelling approaches
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the effects of management and hydro-edaphic conditions on rice in contrasting East African wetlands using experimental and modelling approaches
title_short Assessing the effects of management and hydro-edaphic conditions on rice in contrasting East African wetlands using experimental and modelling approaches
title_sort assessing the effects of management and hydro edaphic conditions on rice in contrasting east african wetlands using experimental and modelling approaches
topic apsim
floodplain
inland valley
oryza spp
tanzania
uganda
research
rice
wetlands
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116037
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