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. 2018 Jul 12;8:10494. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-28612-6

Table 1.

Soil water sharing and compensation between maize and pea strips under different water availabilities.

Water availability Soil water differences (mm) between the two strips in the M/P system Soil water differences (mm) between the two strips in the PM/P system Soil water sharing and compensational effect
2009 2010 2011 Mean 2009 2010 2011 Mean 2009 2010 2011 Mean
During the co-growth period Amounts of water competed between the two strips (mm)a
Deficit 32.6ac 30.6a 28.1a 30.4a 8.9a 8.4a 7.2a 8.2a 23.6a 22.1ab 20.8b 22.2ab
Sub-optimal 29.1a 30.2a 27.3ab 28.8a 4.1b 5.8b 2.9c 4.3b 24.9a 24.4a 24.3a 24.5a
Optimal 23.9b 25.4b 24.8b 24.7b 3.4b 5.3b 4.5b 4.4b 20.5b 20.1b 20.2b 20.3b
During the period after pea harvest Amounts of water compensated for maize from pea strip (mm)b
Deficit 6.3a 5.4a 4.2a 5.3a −25.9b −38.2a −37.0a −33.7a 32.2b 43.6a 41.3a 39.1a
Sub-optimal 3.9b 2.2b 1.5b 2.5b −33.1a −33.5b −35.7a −34.1a 37.1a 35.7b 37.4a 36.7ab
Optimal 1.6c 1.2b 1.4b 1.4b −29.0ab −35.0ab −29.8b −31.3a 30.8b 36.3b 31.3b 32.7b

The soil water sharing was determined during the co-growth period, whereas the water compensation was after pea harvest. The differences in soil water content (mm) were the total amount in the 0–110 cm soil profile, at Wuwei Experimental Station, China, 2009–2010.

aWater sharing = (differences in soil water content between the two strips in the M/P system)–(differences in soil water content between the two strips in the PM/P system), modified from Chen et al.38.

bSoil water compensation for the maize plants from the pea strips after pea harvest.

cDifferent letters in the same column in each section denote significant differences at P < 0.05.