Deconstructing agronomic resource use efficiencies to increase food production

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Food production per unit land area needs to be increased, thus cropping systems need to use nutrients, water and solar radiation at as close to maximal efficiencies as possible. We deconstruct these efficiencies into their components to define a theoretical crop ideosystem, in which all resource use efficiencies are maximised. This defines an upper biological limit to food production. We then quantify the difference between maximum use efficiencies and those observed in three agronomic systems (maize, cocksfoot, sugarcane) and identify how, in actual farm systems, efficiencies can be raised to raise food production. We find that crop nutrient use efficiency can be limited by low water availability; thus adding nutrients would not raise production but adding water would. The converse situation of water use efficiency being affected by nutrition is not as evident. Ideosystem thinking can be used to define small-and large-scale agronomic systems that optimize water and nutrient use to maximise food production.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1694
JournalItalian Journal of Agronomy
Volume16
Issue number3
Number of pages6
ISSN1125-4718
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© the Author(s), 2021 Licensee PAGEPress, Italy.

    Research areas

  • Crop ideosystem, Dactylis glomerata, Resource deconstruction, Resource use efficiency, Saccharum officinarum, Zea mays

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