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A Research Road Map for Responsible Use of Agricultural Nitrogen

Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems 2021 98 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Michael K. Udvardi, Frederick E. Below, Xuejun Liu Susanne Schmidt, Michael J. Castellano, Alison J. Eagle, K.E. Giller, Xuejun Liu Xuejun Liu Xuejun Liu Xuejun Liu Xuejun Liu J. K. Ladha, Xuejun Liu Xuejun Liu Susanne Schmidt, Xuejun Liu Xuejun Liu Tai McClellan Maaz, Xuejun Liu Bárbara Nova-Franco, Xuejun Liu Nandula Raghuram, G. Philip Robertson, Sonali Roy, Malay C. Saha, Susanne Schmidt, Xuejun Liu Mechthild Tegeder, Larry M. York, John W. Peters, Xuejun Liu Xuejun Liu Xuejun Liu

Summary

This review examines the challenges of balancing agricultural nitrogen use for food security with the environmental consequences of excess reactive nitrogen. Researchers found that the massive use of industrial nitrogen fertilizer has doubled the nitrogen moving through the global cycle, with dramatic environmental consequences, and they propose a research road map for more responsible agricultural nitrogen management.

Body Systems

Nitrogen (N) is an essential but generally limiting nutrient for biological systems. Development of the Haber-Bosch industrial process for ammonia synthesis helped to relieve N limitation of agricultural production, fueling the Green Revolution and reducing hunger. However, the massive use of industrial N fertilizer has doubled the N moving through the global N cycle with dramatic environmental consequences that threaten planetary health. Thus, there is an urgent need to reduce losses of reactive N from agriculture, while ensuring sufficient N inputs for food security. Here we review current knowledge related to N use efficiency (NUE) in agriculture and identify research opportunities in the areas of agronomy, plant breeding, biological N fixation (BNF), soil N cycling, and modeling to achieve responsible, sustainable use of N in agriculture. Amongst these opportunities, improved agricultural practices that synchronize crop N demand with soil N availability are low-hanging fruit. Crop breeding that targets root and shoot physiological processes will likely increase N uptake and utilization of soil N, while breeding for BNF effectiveness in legumes will enhance overall system NUE. Likewise, engineering of novel N-fixing symbioses in non-legumes could reduce the need for chemical fertilizers in agroecosystems but is a much longer-term goal. The use of simulation modeling to conceptualize the complex, interwoven processes that affect agroecosystem NUE, along with multi-objective optimization, will also accelerate NUE gains.

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