Citation Information

  • Title : Deep tillage and crop rotation effects on cotton, soybean, and grain sorghum on clayey soils.
  • Source : Agronomy Journal
  • Publisher : American Society of Agronomy
  • Volume : 93
  • Issue : 1
  • Pages : 170-178
  • Year : 2001
  • DOI : 10.2134/agronj20
  • ISBN : 10.2134/agronj2001.931170x
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Spurlock, S. R.
    • Elmore, C. D.
    • Wesley, R. A.
  • Climates: Temperate (C). Humid subtropical (Cwa, Cfa).
  • Cropping Systems: Continuous cropping. Cotton. Sorghum. Soybean. Till cropping systems. Dryland cropping system.
  • Countries: USA.

Summary

Deep tillage (subsoiling) of clayey soils in the fall when the profile is dry is a new concept that results in increased yields and net returns from soyabean (Glycine max) grown without irrigation. Crop rotation may also result in increased crop yields. Field studies were conducted on Tunica clay (clayey over loamy, smectitic, nonacid, thermic, Vertic Haplaquept) near Stoneville, Mississippi, USA (33degrees 26? N lat), during 1993-97, to determine the individual and combined effects of fall deep tillage and crop rotations on crop yields and net returns. Treatments included monocrop cotton (Gossypium hirsutum cultivars DES 119 and Suregrow 125), soyabean (cultivars Pioneer 9592 and DPL 3588), and grain sorghum ( Sorghum bicolor cv. Pioneer 8333), and biennial rotations of cotton with grain sorghum and soyabean with grain sorghum grown without irrigation and in either a conventional-till (CT) or deep-till (DT) production system. Yields from all cotton and soyabean crop sequences grown in the DT respectively averaged 541 kg ha -1 and 525 kg ha -1 greater than comparable cotton (2184 kg ha -1) and soyabean (2983 kg ha -1) crop sequences grown in the CT. Net returns from monocrop cotton ($552 ha -1) and soyabean ($462 ha -1) in the DT respectively averaged $392 ha -1 and $121 ha -1 more than similar crop sequences in the CT. Rotations increased cotton and soyabean yields but not net returns because of the low value of the grain sorghum component. These data indicate that fall deep tillage should be incorporated into monocrop cotton and soyabean crop sequences to maximize and stabilize net returns from these crops on Tunica clay.

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