• Authors:
    • Norby, R. J.
    • Matamala, R.
    • Miller, R. M.
    • Jastrow, J. D.
    • Boutton, T. W.
    • Rice, C. W.
    • Owensby, C. E.
  • Source: Global Change Biology
  • Volume: 11
  • Issue: 12
  • Year: 2005
  • Summary: The general lack of significant changes in mineral soil C stocks during CO2-enrichment experiments has cast doubt on predictions that increased soil C can partially offset rising atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Here, we show, through meta-analysis techniques, that these experiments collectively exhibited a 5.6% increase in soil C over 2-9 years, at a median rate of 19 g C m(-2) yr(-1). We also measured C accrual in deciduous forest and grassland soils, at rates exceeding 40 g C m(-2) yr(-1) for 5-8 years, because both systems responded to CO2 enrichment with large increases in root production. Even though native C stocks were relatively large, over half of the accrued C at both sites was incorporated into microaggregates, which protect C and increase its longevity. Our data, in combination with the meta-analysis, demonstrate the potential for mineral soils in diverse temperate ecosystems to store additional C in response to CO2 enrichment.
  • Authors:
    • Dille, J. A.
    • Stahlman, P. W.
    • Bensch, C. N.
    • Al-Khatib, K.
    • Liphadzi, K. B.
    • Todd, T.
    • Rice, C. W.
    • Horak, M. J.
    • Head, G.
  • Source: Weed Science
  • Volume: 53
  • Issue: 4
  • Year: 2005
  • Summary: Field experiments were conducted at Ashland Bottoms in northeastern Kansas and at Hays in western Kansas in 2001, 2002, and 2003 to determine the response of soil microbial and nematode communities to different herbicides and tillage practices under a glyphosate-resistant cropping system. Conventional herbicide treatments were a tank mixture of cloransulam plus S metolachlor plus sulfentrazone for soybean and a commercially available mixture of acetochlor and atrazine for corn. Glyphosate was applied at 1.12 kg ai ha(-1) when weeds were 10 or 20 cm tall in both corn and soybean. Soil samples were collected monthly at Ashland Bottoms during the growing period for soil microbial biomass (SMB) carbon determination. In addition, substrate-induced respiration (SIR) and BIOLOG substrate utilization were determined at the end of the growing season each year at Ashland Bottoms, and nematode populations were determined at the beginning and the end of the growing season at both sites. Direct effects of glyphosate rates on soil microbial and nematode communities were also studied in a controlled environment. Values for SMB carbon, SIR, and BIOLOG substrate utilization were not altered by glyphosate. Nematode community response to the glyphosate treatment was similar under both conventional tillage and no-till environments. Total nematode densities were similar with the glyphosate and conventional herbicide treatments. SMB carbon and BIOLOG substrate utilization did not differ between tillage treatments. Nematode densities were greater under conventional tillage than in the no-till system. This study showed that soil health when glyphosate was applied in a glyphosate-resistant cropping system was similar to that of cropping systems that used conventional herbicides.
  • Authors:
    • Milliken, GA
    • Rice, CW
    • Mikha, MM
  • Source: Soil Biology and Biochemistry
  • Volume: 37
  • Issue: 2
  • Year: 2005
  • Summary: Drying and rewetting of soil is an important process in soil aggregation, soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition, and nutrient cycling We investigated the source of the C and N flush that occurs upon rewetting of dry soil, and whether it is from microbial death and/or aggregate destruction. A moderately well drained Kennebec silt loam (Fine-silty, mixed, superactive, mesic Cumulic Hapludoll) was sampled to a 10 cm depth. Soil under constant water content (CWC) was compared with soil subjected to a series of four dry-wet (DW) cycles during the experimental period (96 d) and incubated at 25 degreesC. Mineralized C and N were measured during the drying and rewetting periods. Aggregate size distributions were studied by separating the soil into four aggregate size classes (> 2000, 250-2000, 53-250, and 2053 pm) by wet sieving. Repeated DW cycles significantly reduced cumulative N mineralization compared with CWC. The reduction in cumulative mineralized C resulting from DW compared with CWC increased as the DW treatments were subjected to additional cycles. The flush of mineralized C significantly decreased with repeated DW cycles. There was no significant effect on aggregate size distributions resulting from to the DW cycles compared with CWC treatment. Therefore, the flush of mineralized C and N seemed to be mostly microbial in origin in as much as aggregate distribution was unaffected by DW cycles. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
  • Authors:
    • Cooke, F. T.,Jr.
    • Robinson, J. R. C.
    • Martin, S. W.
    • Parvin, D.
  • Source: Crop Management
  • Issue: April
  • Year: 2005
  • Summary: This study compared conventional, reduced tillage and no-till systems for cotton, maize, soyabean and sorghum in the Mississippi Delta. Most of the necessary parameters (e.g. yields, costs, equipment, field operations) were obtained from published budgets. The conventional systems typically involved subsoiling, discing, field cultivation, hipping and in-season cultivation. The reduced tillage systems substituted herbicides for heavy pre-plant soil preparation and in-season cultivation, while no-till systems substituted herbicides for all tillage operations. A whole-farm, mixed integer programming model was developed to determine the most profitable crop/tillage combinations at different acreage sizes, assess the actual economies of size (in dollars per acre) in row crop farming, determine the number of acres required to maximize economic viability, determine the best acreage size to minimize or optimize full-time labour, and evaluate profitability trade-offs, including farm programme eligibility, under different tillage systems.
  • Authors:
    • Peterson, G. A.
    • Westfall, D. G.
    • Ortega, R. A.
  • Source: Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis
  • Volume: 36
  • Issue: 19/20
  • Year: 2005
  • Summary: In the West Central Great Plains of the United States, no-till management has allowed for increased cropping intensity under dryland conditions. This, in turn, has affected the carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) mineralization dynamics of these systems. In this region, moisture stress increases from north to south due to an increase in evapotranspiration (ET), resulting in a climatic gradient that affects cropping system management. The objectives of this study were to determine the interaction of cropping system intensification and climatic gradient (ET) on C and N mineralization and to determine if the presence or absence of crop residue on the soil surface affects C and net N mineralization. Two cropping systems, winter wheat-fallow (WF) ( Triticum aestivium L.) and winter wheat-corn (sorghum)-millet-fallow (WCMF) [ Zea mays (L.), Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench, Panicum milaceum (L.)] were studied at three locations across this aforementioned ET gradient. The treatments had been in place for 8 yrs prior to sampling in the study. These results showed that the more intense cropping system (WCMF) had a higher laboratory C mineralization rate at two of the three locations, which the study concluded resulted from larger residue biomass additions and larger quantities of surface residue and soil residue at these locations (Soil residue is defined as recognizable crop residue in the soil that is retained on a 0.6 mm screen). However, no differences in N mineralization occurred. This is most likely due to more N immobilization under WCMF as compared to WF. Presence or absence of crop residue on the surface of undisturbed soil cores during incubation affected potential C and net N mineralization more than either cropping system or location. Soil cores with the surface residue intact mineralized as much as 270% more C than the same soils where the surface crop residue had been removed. In laboratory studies evaluating the relative differences in cropping systems effects on C and N mineralization, the retention of crop residue on the soil surface may more accurately access the cropping system effects.
  • Authors:
    • Price, A.
    • Saini, M.
    • van Santen, E.
  • Source: 2005 Southern Conservation Tillage Systems Conference, Oral Proceedings, Clemson University
  • Year: 2005
  • Summary: An integral component of a conservation-tillage system in corn (Zea mays L.) and cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) is the use of a winter cover crop. A field experiment was initiated in 2002 to evaluate winter weed dynamics following various winter cover crops in both continuous cotton and a corn and cotton rotation. Winter cover crops included black oats (Avena strigosa Schreb.); two crimson clover entries (Trifolium incarnatum L.); two cultivars of forage rape (Brassica napus L. var. napus), spring and winter; oil radish (Raphanus sativus var. oleiformis Pers.); three cultivars of turnip ( Brassica rapa L. subsp. rapa); white lupin ( Lupinus albus L.); and a mixture of black oat and lupin. Two-year conservation-tillage rotational sequences included conventionally tilled continuous corn and cotton winter fallow systems as controls. The 10 conservation-tillage, winter cover-crop systems investigated were three continuous cotton systems that alternated a winter legume (lupin or clover), six cotton-corn systems, where lupin preceded cotton and radish, rape, or turnip preceded corn, and a cotton-corn system that had a lupin-black oat mixture as a winter cover crop every year. Use of lupin or 'AU Robin' clover resulted in weed biomass reduction of up to 80% and 54%, respectively, in weed biomass compared to the fallow system. The highest yielding corn-cotton conservation tillage rotation with a winter cover yielded 200 lbs/acre more that the continuous cotton winter fallow system. Continuous conventional corn with winter fallow yielded 30 bu/acre less than the highest yielding 2-yr, conservation tillage winter crop system.
  • Authors:
    • Whitehead, W. F.
    • Sainju, U. M.
    • Singh, B. P.
  • Source: Plant and Soil
  • Volume: 273
  • Issue: 1-2
  • Year: 2005
  • Summary: Soil and crop management practices may influence biomass growth and yields of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) and sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.) and sequester significant amount of atmospheric CO, in plant biomass and underlying soil, thereby helping to mitigate the undesirable effects of global warming. This study examined the effects of three tillage practices [no-till (NT), strip till (ST), and chisel till (CT)],. four cover crops [legume (hairy vetch) (Vicia villosa Roth), nonlegume (rye) (Secale cereale L), hairy vetch/rye mixture, and winter weeds or no cover crop], and three N fertilization rates (0, 60-65, and 120-130 kg N ha(-1)) on the amount of C sequestered in cotton lint (lint + seed), sorghum grain. their stalks (stems + leaves) and roots, and underlying soil from 2000 to 2002 In central Georgia, USA. A field experiment was conducted on a Dothan sandy loam (fine-loamy, kaolinitic, thermic. Plinthic Kandiudults). In 2000, C accumulation in cotton lint was greater in NT with rye or vetch/rye mixture but in stalks, it was greater in ST with vetch or vetch/rye mixture than in CT with or without cover crops. Similarly, C accumulation in lint was greater in NT with 60 kg N ha(-1) but in stalks, it was greater in ST with 60 and 120 kg N ha(-1) than in CT with 0 kg N ha(-1). In 2001, C accumulation in sorghum grains and stalks was greater in vetch and vetch/rye mixture with or without N rate than in rye without N rate. In 2002, C accumulation in cotton lint was greater in CT with or without N rate but in stalks, it was greater in ST with 60 and 120 kg N ha(-1) than in NT with or without N rate. Total C accumulation in the above- and belowground biomass in cotton ranged from 1.7 to 5.6 Mg ha(-1) and in sorghum ranged from 3.4 to 7.2 Mg ha(-1). Carbon accumulation in cotton and sorghum roots ranged from 1 to 14% of the total C accumulation in above- and belowground biomass. In NT, soil organic C at 0-10 cm depth was greater in vetch with 0 kg N ha(-1) or in vetch/rye with 120-130 kg N ha(-1) than in weeds with 0 and 60 kg N ha(-1) but at 10-30 cm, it was greater in rye with 120-130 kg N ha(-1) than in weeds with or without rate. In ST, soil organic C at 0-10 cm was greater in rye with 120-130 kg N ha(-1) than in rye, vetch, vetch/rye and weeds with 0 and 60 kg N ha(-1). Soil organic C at 0-10 and 10-30 cm was also greater in NT and ST than in CT. Since 5 to 24% of C accumulation in lint and grain were harvested, C sequestered in cotton and sorghum stalks and roots can be significant in the terrestrial ecosystem and can significantly increase C storage in the soil if these residues are left after lint or grain harvest, thereby helping to mitigate the effects of global warming. Conservation tillage, such as ST, with hairy vetch/rye mixture cover crops and 6065 kg N ha(-1) can sustain C accumulation in cotton lint and sorghum grain and increase C storage soil compared with conventional tillage, such as CT, with no cover crop and N fertilization, thereby maintaining crop yields, improving soil quality, and reducing erosion.
  • Authors:
    • Abou-Alaiw, W.
    • Al-Abed, D.
    • Zhang, S. L.
    • Parani, M.
    • Chennareddy, S.
    • Sairam, R.
    • Goldman, S.
  • Source: In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant
  • Volume: 41
  • Issue: 4
  • Year: 2005
  • Summary: The development of robust plant regeneration technology in cereals, dicots and ornamentals that is in turn coupled to a high-frequency DNA transfer technology is reported. Transgenic cereals that include maize, Tripsacum, sorghum, Festuca and Lolium, in addition to dicots that include soybean, cotton and various ornamentals such as petunia, begonia, and geranium have been produced following either somatic embryogenesis or direct organogenesis independent of genotype. Coupled with these regeneration protocols, we have also identified several interesting genes and promoters for incorporation into various crops and ornamentals. In addition, the phenomenon of direct in vitro flowering from cotyledonary nodes in soybean is described. In in vitro flowering, the formation of a plant body is suppressed and the cells of the cotyledonary node produce complete flowers from which fertile seed is recovered. This in vitro flowering technology serves as a complementary tool to chloroplast transformation for developing a new transgenic pollen containment strategy for crop species. Recently, the center has undertaken to screen the expression response of the 24 000 Arabidopsis genes to nitric oxide. This signaling molecule upregulated 342 genes and downregulated 80 genes. The object here was to identify a population of promoters that can be manipulated by using a signaling molecule. In addition, in keeping with the mission of enhancing greenhouse profitability for North West Ohio growers, we cloned a number of genes responsive for disease resistance from ornamentals that play an important role in disease management and abiotic stress. We have constructed a plant transformation vector with CBF3 gene under the rd29A promoter for engineering cold and freezing tolerance in petunia. Leaf discs of Petunia * hybrida v26 were used for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, and 44 hygromycin-resistant T0 plants were obtained. The presence of CBF3 gene was confirmed in all the transgenic plants by PCR and Southern analyses.
  • Authors:
    • Rosenberg, N. J.
    • Brown, R. A.
    • Thomson, A. M.
    • Izaurralde, R. C.
    • Benson, V.
  • Source: Climatic Change
  • Volume: 69
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 2005
  • Summary: Here we simulate dryland agriculture in the United States in order to assess potential future agricultural production under a set of general circulation model (GCM)-based climate change scenarios. The total national production of three major grain crops - corn, soybeans, and winter wheat - and two forage crops - alfalfa and clover hay - is calculated for the actual present day core production area (CPA) of each of these crops. In general, higher global mean temperature (GMT) reduces production and higher atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration ([CO 2]) increases production. Depending on the climatic change scenarios employed overall national production of the crops studied changes by up to plus or minus 25% from present-day levels. Impacts are more significant regionally, with crop production varying by greater than 50% from baseline levels. Analysis of currently possible production areas (CPPAs) for each crop indicates that the regions most likely to be affected by climate change are those on the margins of the areas in which they are currently grown. Crop yield variability was found to be primarily influenced by local weather and geographic features rather than by large-scale changes in climate patterns and atmospheric composition. Future US agronomic potential will be significantly affected by the changes in climate projected here. The nature of the crop response will depend primarily on to what extent precipitation patterns change and also on the degree of warming experienced.
  • Authors:
    • Hanna, W. W.
    • Timper, P.
  • Source: Journal of Nematology
  • Volume: 37
  • Issue: 2
  • Year: 2005
  • Summary: Pearl millet ( Pennisetum glaucum) has potential as a grain crop for dryland crop production in the southeastern United States. Whether or not pearl millet will be compatible in rotation with cotton ( Gossypium hirsutum), corn ( Zea mays), and peanut ( Arachis hypogaea) will depend, in part, on its host status for important plant-parasitic nematodes of these crops. The pearl millet hybrid 'TifGrain 102' is resistant to both Meloidogyne incognita race 3 and M. arenaria race 1; however, its host status for other plant-parasitic nematodes was unknown. In this study, the reproduction of Belonolaimus longicaudatus, Paratrichodorus minor, Pratylenchus brachyurus, and Meloidogyne javanica race 3 on pearl millet ('HGM-100' and TifGrain 102) was compared relative to cotton, corn, and peanut. Separate greenhouse experiments were conducted for each nematode species. Reproduction of B. longicaudatus was lower on peanut and the two millet hybrids than on cotton and corn. Reproduction of P. minor was lower on peanut and TifGrain 102 than on cotton, corn, and HGM-100. Reproduction of P. brachyurus was lower on both millet hybrids than on cotton, corn, and peanut. Reproduction of M. javanica race 3 was greater on peanut than on the two millet hybrids and corn. Cotton was a nonhost. TifGrain 102 was more resistant than HGM-100 to reproduction of B. longicaudatus, P. minor, and M. javanica. Our results demonstrated that TifGrain 102 was a poor host for B. longicaudatus and P. brachyurus (Rf