Xiaoqiang Tan, Mingqiang Bai, Sijia Wang, Zongkai Wang, Lei Zhang, Dongxu Luo, Pan Gao, Yang Xu, Chengchi Zhang, Yuzhe Chen, Haicai Fu, Yan Xie, Bo Wang, Jie Zhao, Zhenghua Xu, Jing Wang, Jie Kuai, Guangsheng Zhou
Accepted: 2026-04-15
The rapeseed cropping system following rice in the Yangtze River Basin (YRB) universally faces the challenge of tight crop succession. To address this, integrating unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) sowing with no-tillage practices and high-density direct seeding has been recognized as a crucial agronomic approach. However, high-density planting intensifies intraspecific competition, quantified as relative competition intensity (RCI), which impairs root-shoot development and creates a prominent contradiction between lodging resistance and yield. To investigate this, a two-year field experiment was conducted to quantify the interactive effects of tillage methods (CK, tillage with manual sowing; N, no-tillage with UAV-sowing; T, tillage with UAV-sowing) and seeding rates (S1, 3.75; S2, 5.25; S3, 6.75 kg ha⁻1). Across the three tillage modes, sequential increases in seeding rate from S1 to S3 resulted in significant increases in population density, grain yield, and RCI, but a significant reduction in yield per plant. Integrated data from the two years revealed that the N mode significantly reduced the Relative Competition Intensity (RCI) by 32.3-37.7% compared to the CK and T modes. This management practice also optimized dry matter partitioning, increasing the root-shoot ratio and root mass fraction by 30.8-44.3%, which enhanced root anchorage. Concurrently, it reinforced stem mechanical properties; the contents of stem lignin and cellulose increased by 6.8-10.4%, leading to significantly greater stem strength and a consequent 18.6-35.8% reduction in the lodging index. Furthermore, under the N mode, moderate competitive stress activated key enzymes (phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL), peroxidase (POD), cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase (CAD) by 7.6-46.9%) in the phenylpropanoid pathway, driving the synthesis of structural carbohydrates and enhancing mechanical support. Crucially, the no-tillage with UAV-sowing (N mode) synergistically achieved the dual objectives of high yield and lodging resistance by optimizing root-shoot coordination and reinforcing stem structure. The NS2 and NS3 treatments were identified as the optimal practices for balancing these goals, with yields comparable to or approaching the highest-yielding treatment (TS3) while offering superior lodging resistance. These findings elucidate a cascading relationship of “intraspecific competition - structural plasticity - functional enhancement - high yield and lodging resistance”, providing a precise agronomic framework for simultaneous yield increase and lodging resistance improvement in the YRB.