RESUMO
Harvesting corn stover removes N from the fields, but its effect on subsurface drainage and other N losses is uncertain. We used the Root Zone Water Quality Model (RZWQM) to examine N losses with 0 (NRR) or 50% (RR) corn residue removal within a corn and soybean rotation over a 10-yr period. In general, all simulations used the same pre-plant or post-emergence N fertilizer rate (200â¯kgâ¯ha-1â¯yr-1). Simulated annual corn yields averaged 10.7â¯Mgâ¯ha-1 for the post emergence applications (NRRpost and RRpost), and 9.5 and 9.4â¯Mgâ¯ha-1â¯yr-1 for NRRpre and RRpre. Average total N input during corn years was 19.3â¯kgâ¯Nâ¯ha-1 greater for NRRpre compared to RRpre due to additional N in surface residues, but drainage N loss was only 1.1â¯kgâ¯Nâ¯ha-1â¯yr-1 greater for NRRpre. Post-emergence N application with no residue removal (NRRpost) reduced average drainage N loss by 16.5â¯kgâ¯ha-1â¯yr-1 compared to pre-plant N fertilization (NRRpre). The farm-gate net energy ratio was greatest for RRpost and lowest for NRRpre (14.1 and 10.4â¯MJ output per MJ input) while greenhouse gas intensity was lowest for RRpost and highest for NRRpre (11.7 and 17.3â¯g CO2-eq.â¯MJ-1 output). Similar to published studies, the simulations showed little difference in N2O emissions between scenarios, decreased microbial immobilization for RR compared to NRR, and small soil carbon changes over the 10-yr simulation. In contrast to several previous modeling studies, the crop yield and N lost to drain flow were nearly the same between NRR and RR without supplemental N applied to replace N removed with corn stover. These results are important to optimizing the energy and nitrogen budgets associated with corn stover harvest and for developing a sustainable bioenergy industry.