How Grass–Legume Rotations Are Quietly Rewriting Maize Nutrition

A new study reveals that a simple shift in crop rotation—introducing a four-year grass–legume phase—can significantly cut nitrogen fertilizer needs in maize. The findings offer a practical, science-backed pathway toward more resilient and cost-efficient farming systems
How Grass–Legume Rotations Are Quietly Rewriting Maize Nutrition
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Springer International Publishing
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A Four-Year Grass–Legume Ley Reduces Nitrogen Fertilisation Requirements in the First Year of Subsequent Maize - Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition

Ley phases in crop rotations can supply nutrients to subsequent crops through organic matter mineralisation. However, the persistence of these effects and the relative contributions of mineral and organic fertilisation remain poorly understood. Based on an irrigated rotation with a four-year ley followed by four years of maize, a field experiment was established in the first maize year after the ley. The trial followed a completely randomised design with seven treatments and three replicates: mineral nitrogen (N) at 50 (N50), 100 (N100), and 200 (N200) kg ha⁻¹; farmyard manure (FYM) at equivalent N rates (FYM50, FYM100, FYM200); and an unfertilised control (N0). Over two years, maize was grown as the main crop, followed by oat as a cover crop. In the first maize cycle, no significant treatment effects were observed, with dry matter yield (DMY) ranging from 19.4 to 26.0 t ha⁻¹. In the second maize cycle, DMY under N200 and FYM200 was significantly higher than the control (26.0 and 23.9 vs. 17.4 t ha⁻¹). Compared with mineral fertilisation, FYM initially resulted in lower maize dry matter yield (DMY) but increased oat DMY and improved maize DMY in the second cropping cycle. Across the four-crop sequence, mineral and organic fertilisation resulted in comparable DMY and N recovery in aboveground biomass. The ley phase contributed significantly, but temporarily, to crop nutrition. Mineral and organic fertilisation gave similar productivity, but mineral fertilisers increased residual soil N in autumn, whereas organic amendments suggested a potential long-term advantage.

In a time when agriculture is under mounting pressure to produce more with fewer inputs, this study delivers a refreshingly grounded insight: the soil remembers. Published in the Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition, the research explores how a four-year grass–legume ley can reshape nitrogen availability for the crops that follow—specifically maize. Rather than relying heavily on synthetic fertilizers, the system taps into biological processes that quietly build fertility beneath the surface.

At the heart of the work is a deceptively simple question: how long do the benefits of a ley phase last, and can they meaningfully reduce fertilizer demands? The results are striking. The researchers show that maize grown after a four-year grass–legume mixture requires significantly less nitrogen fertilizer in its first year, thanks to the gradual mineralization of organic matter accumulated during the ley phase. This is not just a temporary boost—it reflects a deeper restructuring of soil nutrient dynamics.

What makes this study particularly compelling is its attention to the balance between organic and mineral nitrogen sources. By tracking how nitrogen is released from plant residues and soil organic matter, the authors illuminate the often unpredictable—but highly valuable—residual effects of diversified rotations. These findings challenge the conventional assumption that nitrogen inputs must be externally driven and highlight instead the potential of internal ecosystem processes.

For researchers across agricultural disciplines—from soil science to crop physiology—the implications are broad. This is not only about nitrogen efficiency; it is about system design. Grass–legume leys contribute to soil structure, microbial activity, and long-term fertility, offering a multi-layered strategy to reduce dependency on fertilizers while maintaining productivity. In practical terms, it suggests that smarter rotations could become as important as smarter inputs.

Ultimately, this research speaks to a larger shift underway in agriculture: moving from input-heavy models to knowledge-intensive systems. By demonstrating that strategic crop sequences can naturally supply part of the nitrogen demand, the study offers a practical pathway forward—one that aligns productivity with environmental stewardship. For scientists and practitioners alike, it is a reminder that some of the most powerful innovations are not new technologies, but new ways of working with the biological capital already present in our soils.

The text and image in this post were created with the assistance of AI.

 

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