Citation Information

  • Title : Conservation tillage, rotations, and cover crop affecting soil quality in the Tennessee valley: Particulate organic matter, organic matter, and microbial biomass
  • Source : Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis
  • Publisher : Taylor & Francis
  • Volume : 38
  • Issue : 19-20
  • Pages : 2831-2847
  • Year : 2007
  • DOI : 10.1080/00103620
  • ISBN : 10.1080/00103620701663065
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Burmester, C.
    • Reeves, D. W.
    • Motta, A. C. V.
    • Feng, Y.
  • Climates: Temperate (C). Humid subtropical (Cwa, Cfa).
  • Cropping Systems: Cotton. Cover cropping. Conservation cropping systems. Conventional cropping systems. No-till cropping systems. Till cropping systems.
  • Countries: USA.

Summary

The impact of conservation tillage, crop rotation, and cover cropping on soil-quality indicators was evaluated in a long-term experiment for cotton. Compared to conventional-tillage cotton, other treatments had 3.4 to 7.7 Mg ha(-1) more carbon (C) over all soil depths. The particulate organic matter C (POMc) accounts for 29 to 48 and 16 to 22% of soil organic C (SOC) for the 0- to 3- and 3- to 6-cm depths, respectively. Tillage had a strongth influence on POMc within the 0- to 3-cm depth, but cropping intensity and cover crop did not affect POW A large stratification for microbial biomass was observed varing from 221 to 434 and 63 to 110 mg kg(-1) within depth of 0-3 and 12-24 cm respectively. The microbial biomass is a more sensitive indicator (compared to SOC) of management impacts, showing clear effect of tillage, rotation, and cropping intensity. The no-tillage cotton double-cropped wheat/soybean system that combined high cropping intensity and crop rotation provided the best soil quality.

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