# Response of Maize Yield and Nitrogen Use Efficiency to Integrated Cover Crop Rotation and Nitrogen Management Practices

**Authors:** Wei Qi, Long Zhang, Qila Sa, Wenhua Xu, Yanjie Lv, Shan Lan, Fanyun Yao, Yongjun Wang

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/plants15060877 · Plants · 2026-03-12

## TL;DR

Rotating maize with cover crops like rapeseed and rye improves yield and nitrogen use efficiency, potentially reducing the need for nitrogen fertilizer.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that integrating cover crops with nitrogen management can maintain maize yield while improving nitrogen use efficiency.

## Key findings

- Maize rotated with rapeseed and rye increased yield and nitrogen use efficiency compared to continuous maize.
- Higher nitrogen application increased yield but reduced nitrogen use efficiency.
- Rotational cover cropping with 225 kg N ha−1 achieved similar yields to continuous maize with 300 kg N ha−1.

## Abstract

Rotational cover cropping is a key practice in conservation agriculture. To investigate the effects of maize-crop rotation with cover crops combined with nitrogen management on maize yield, nitrogen use efficiency (NUE), and related traits, a field experiment was conducted from 2023 to 2025. The experiment employed a split-plot design. The main plots consisted of three cropping systems: continuous maize (Fumin 985’) monoculture (CK), maize rotated with rapeseed (CC-Ra), and maize rotated with rye (CC-Ry). The subplots comprised five nitrogen (N) fertilizer application rates (0, 75, 150, 225, and 300 kg ha−1) respectively. Compared to CK, CC-Ra and CC-Ry increased average maize grain yield by 5.93% and 12.89%, and NUE by 8.09% and 2.89%, respectively. At the silking stage, these treatments increased average DM by 6.45% and 16.55%, respectively, and by 5.75% and 15.01% at the maturity stage. The maximum LAI was enhanced by an average of 16.24% and 26.82%, while the net photosynthetic rate (Pn) of the ear leaf increased by 12.29% and 26.32%, respectively. In contrast, the leaf net assimilation rate (NAR) decreased by an average of 19.98% and 18.01%. While higher N application boosted yield, it sharply reduced NUE. Notably, yields under rotations at 225 kg N ha−1 matched the yield of continuous maize at 300 kg N ha−1. This suggests that the inclusion of cover crops can substitute for a portion of nitrogen fertilizer input while maintaining stable maize yield. Principal component analysis fundamentally clarified that maize rotational cover cropping combined with nitrogen fertilizer management significantly promotes yield. While cover crops increase maize yield, they also facilitate nitrogen accumulation and enhance NUE, albeit at the expense of leaf net assimilation rate. Therefore, balancing the source–sink characteristics of the maize population is necessary to avoid the loss of advantages conferred by rotational cover cropping. This study holds significant implications for incorporating cover crops into maize production systems.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Zea mays (taxon 4577), Brassica napus (taxon 3708), Secale cereale (taxon 4550)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** N (MESH:D009584)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

60 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13029392/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13029392