- Authors:
- Buxton, D. R.
- Anderson, I. C.
- Hallam, A.
- Source: Biomass and Bioenergy
- Volume: 21
- Issue: 6
- Year: 2001
- Authors:
- Spurlock, S. R.
- Elmore, C. D.
- Wesley, R. A.
- Source: Agronomy Journal
- Volume: 93
- Issue: 1
- Year: 2001
- 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.
- Authors:
- Khosla, R.
- Alley, M. M.
- Davis, P. H.
- Source: Agronomy Journal
- Volume: 92
- Issue: 2
- Year: 2000
- Summary: Grain sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] is grown in rotation with wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and soybean [Glycine mar (L.) Merr.] in the mid-Atlantic Sufficient data on N fertilization of sorghum are not available for this region. Our objective was to evaluate the influence of multi-rate N fertilization on dryland sorghum. Treatments consisted of factorial combinations of four starter-band N rates (11, 34, 56, and 78 kg N ha(-1)) and four sidedress N rates (0, 45, 90, and 134 kg N ha(-1)). A broadcast treatment of 67 kg N ha(-1) at planting was also included. Starter-band was applied 5 cm to the side and below the seed. Sidedress was applied 35 days after emergence at the eight-leaf growth stage. Grain yield ranged from 1.7 to 11.9 Mg ha(-1) over eight site-years and was responsive and nonresponsive to N applications on four sites each. Nonresponsiveness was either due to high levels (>85 kg N ha(-1)) of residual soil mineral N, or severe water stress conditions. Our results indicate that production of sorghum on soils testing high in mineral N (50 kg N ha(-1) in the surface 0.3 m) at planting should not receive any starter-band N in conjunction with sidedress N application of 130 kg N ha(-1) for optimum economic return to N fertilization. For soils testing low in mineral N, 40 kg N ha(-1) starter-band in conjunction with 130 kg N ha(-1) sidedress N should optimize the sorghum yields in most situations.
- Authors:
- Source: Soil Science Society of America Journal
- Volume: 64
- Issue: 2
- Year: 2000
- Summary: The number of growing seasons required for no-till practices to improve soil properties should be considered before changing management systems. To evaluate this time factor, an 8-yr tillage study was conducted on a Grenada silt loam (fine-silty, mixed, active, thermic Glossic Fragiudalfs) using cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.), grain sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench]-corn (Zea mays L.), and soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.]-wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) as test crops. Soil samples were characterized for soil organic matter (SOM), pH, exchangeable Ca and Mg, extractable P, K, Fe, Mn, Cu, and Zn, aggregate stability (AS), water dispersible clay (WDC), total clay (TC), and modulus of rupture (MR) at time 0, 4, and 8 yr. Within 4 yr, no-till (NT) resulted in statistically significant (P less than or equal to 0.05) differences compared to conventional tillage (CT). The surface 2.5 cm of the NT treatments had higher levels of SOM, exchangeable Ca, and extractable P, Mn, and Zn, but lower extractable K, Fe, and Cu. Tillage had no effect on exchangeable Mg and pH. No-till also resulted in higher AS, and lower MR, WDC, and TC in the top 2.5 cm, relative to CT. The differences in soil properties between tillage treatments were essentially independent of crop. Instead, the results are controlled by relative amounts of SOM and clay, and the extent to which these properties change with time. Undoubtedly, NT practices ran improve several fertility and erodibility-related properties of this soil within 4 yr, and-enhance its sustainability.
- Authors:
- Source: Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata
- Volume: 95
- Issue: 1
- Year: 2000
- Summary: A review of the literature showed that spider abundance was increased by diversification in 63% of studies. A comparison of diversification modes showed that spider abundance in the crop was increased in 33% of studies by `aggregated diversification' (e.g. intercropping and non-crop strips) and in 80% of studies by `interspersed diversification' (e.g., undersowing, partial weediness, mulching and reduced tillage). It is suggested that spiders tend to remain in diversified patches and that extending the diversification throughout the whole crop (as in interspersed diversification) offers the best prospects for improving pest control. There is little evidence that spiders walk in significant numbers into fields from uncultivated field edges, but diversification at the landscape level serves to foster large multi-species regional populations of spiders which are valuable as a source of aerial immigrants into newly planted crops. There are very few manipulative field studies where the impact of spiders on pests has been measured in diversified crops compared with undiversified controls. It is encouraging, however, that in those few studies an increased spider density resulted in improved pest control. Future work needs are identified.
- Authors:
- Dao, T. H.
- Douglas, C. L.,Jr.
- Schomberg, H. H.
- Allmaras, R. R.
- Source: Journal of Soil and Water Conservation
- Volume: 55
- Issue: 3
- Year: 2000
- Summary: Soil organic carbon (SOC) makes up about two-thirds of the C pool in the terrestrial biosphere; annual C deposition and decomposition to release carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmospheric constitutes about 4% of this SOC pool. Cropland is an important, highly managed component of the biosphere. Among the many managed components of cropland are the production of crop residue, use of tillage systems to control crop residue placement/disturbance, and residue decomposition. An accumulation of SOC is a C sink (a net gain from atmospheric CO2) whereas a net loss of SOC is a C source to atmospheric CO2. A simple three components model was developed to determine whether or not conservation tillage systems were changing cropland from a C source to a C sink. Grain/oil seed yields and harvest indices have indicated a steadily increasing supply of crop residue since 1940, and long term field experiments indicate SOC storage in no-tillage > non moldboard tillage > moldboard tillage systems. According to adoption surveys, moldboard tillage dominated until about 1970, but non moldboard systems are now used nationally on at least 92% of planted wheat, corn, soybean, and sorghum. Consequently, since about 1980, cropland agriculture has become a C sink. Moldboard plow systems had prevented a C sink response to increases in crop residue production that had occurred between 1940 and 1970. The model has not only facilitated a qualitative conclusion about SOC but it has also been used to project production, as well as soil and water conservation benefits, when a C credit or payment to farmers is associated with the C sink in cropland agriculture.
- Authors:
- Schomberg, H. H.
- Jones, O. R.
- Source: Soil Science Society of America Journal
- Volume: 63
- Issue: 5
- Year: 1999
- Summary: Soil C and N greatly influence Long-term sustainability of agricultural systems, We hypothesized that cropping and tillage differentially influence dryland soil C and N characteristics in the Southern High Plains. A Pullman clay loam (fine, mixed, thermic Torrertic Paleustol) cropped to vc heat (Triticum aestivum L.)-sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L) Moench]-fallow (WSF), continuous wheat (CW) and continuous sorghum (CS) under no-tillage (NT), and stubble mulch (SM) was sampled at three depths to determine soil C and N characteristics. For CW, CS, and WSF phases (F-WSF, S-WSF, W-WSF), soil organic C (SOC) averaged 10.6 to 13.1 kg m(-3) and was greatest for CW, Carbon mineralization (C-MIN) at 0 to 20 mm was 30 to 40% greater for CW and F-WSF than for CS, S-WSF, or W-WSF. Cropping system by depth influenced soil organic N (SON),vith greatest SON at 0 to 20 mm in CW (1.5 kg m(-3)). At 0 to 20 mm for SM and NT, SOC was 9.9 and 12.5 kg m(-3), soil microbial biomass C (SMBC) was 0.80 and 1.1 kg m(-3), and soil microbial biomass N (SMBN) was 0.14 and 0.11 kg m(-3). Also at 0 to 20 mm, NT had 60% greater C-MIN, 11% more SMBC as a portion SOC, and 25% more SON compared to SM. Summed for 0 to 80 mm, NT had more SOC (0.98 vs 0.85 kg m(-2)) and SON (0.10 vs 0.9 kg m(-2)) than SM, and CW had greater or equal C and N activity as other systems. Negative correlations between yield and SOC, SMBC, C-MIN, SON, and SMBN indicate N removal in grain negatively affects active and labile C and N pools. Under dryland conditions, C and N conservation is greater with NT and with winter wheat because of less soil disturbance and shorter fallow.
- Authors:
- Gerard, C. J.
- Choudhary, M.
- Bordovsky, D. G.
- Source: Soil Science
- Volume: 164
- Issue: 5
- Year: 1999
- Summary: In the Texas Rolling Plains, low rainfall results in low crop residue production and low soil organic matter. Low soil organic matter, coupled with low levels of silt and clay, give soils poor structure. An 11-year (1979-1989) field experiment was conducted to determine the effects of tillage (reduced vs. conventional), cropping, and residue management (with residue vs. without residue) on soil properties under dryland and irrigated systems. Cropping included a grain sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench.) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) monoculture and doublecropped, reduced tillage wheat-grain sorghum under irrigation only. Surface soil organic matter in plots with irrigated grain sorghum and wheat increased with time. Reduced-tillage irrigated grain sorghum and wheat, and especially reduced-tillage, double-cropped grain sorghum and wheat plots, had significantly higher organic matter content than conventional-tillage grain sorghum and wheat plots. Bulk density under the reduced tillage system was higher than with the conventional tillage system. However, saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ks) of the surface soil was increased by reduced tillage practices compared with conventional tillage. This may have been attributable to higher amounts of microaggregates and larger macropores under the reduced tillage system. Residue removal decreased the Ks of surface soil, especially in reduced-tillage grain sorghum and wheat plots. Microaggregation values were higher with residue retained than with residue removed (27.1 vs. 23.5 g kg-1 in dryland and 32.3 vs. 27.1 g kg-1 in irrigation). Results indicate that residue removal from Rolling Plains soils should be discouraged. Because of higher bulk density, use of a reduced tillage system may result in the need for occasional deep chiseling to reduce the effects of compaction.
- Authors:
- Source: Journal of Production Agriculture
- Volume: 11
- Issue: 3
- Year: 1998
- Summary: Tillage and N management are important in dryland crop production of the west central Great Plains (area between the 99(th) meridian and the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains) because of frequent periods of limited soil moisture. Therefore, judicious use of N fertilizer is a management priority in wheat (Triticum aestivum L,)-sorghum [Sorghum biocolor (L,) Moench]- fallow (W-S-F) rotations. The objectives of this study were to: (i) determine the long-term effects of N fertilization (0, 20, 40, and 60 lb N/acre) on grain yields of winter wheat and grain sorghum under three tillage systems, (ii) investigate the effect of soil moisture at or near planting on grain yields, and (iii) evaluate the residual profile soil inorganic N after 20 yr of N fertilization in the three tillage systems. The study involved a W-S-F rotation under three tillage systems on a nearly level Harney silt loam soil (fine, montmorillonite, mesic Typic Argiustoll), The three tillage systems were clean-till (CT), reduced-till (RT), and no-till (NT), Nitrogen was broadcast preplant as ammonium nitrate on each crop at rates of 0, 20, 40, and 60 Ib N/acre, As the level of soil moisture increased in each tillage system, there was a corresponding larger yield increase of wheat and sorghum to applied N, The correlation of grain yields of wheat and sorghum with soil profile N at all depths was highest for nitrate N and lowest for ammonium and total inorganic N. For all three tillage systems, sampling deeper than 6 in, resulted in little improvement in the coefficient of determination (R-2) for grain yields regressed on soil nitrate N, Residual soil nitrate N was highest in the top 6 in., dropped significantly in the 6- to 12-in. depth, and remained relatively low thereafter throughout the 72-in. sampling depth. Data from this long-term study showed the optimum broadcast N rate was approximately 60 Ib N/acre applied on each crop grown in a W-S-F rotation with the exact rate depending on soil moisture, fertilizer, and crop prices, Yields from CT were comparable with RT on this nearly level upland soil but failed to meet the residue requirements mandated in conservation compliance plans, Poorer stands, increased weed competition, and drier soils resulted in generally lower yields from NT plots. Considering all factors, RT systems for dryland wheat and sorghum production are recommended on upland fertile soils in the west central Great Plains.
- Authors:
- Source: Transactions of the ASAE
- Volume: 41
- Issue: 5
- Year: 1998
- Summary: A comprehensive review of published information on subsurface drip irrigation was performed to determine the state of the art on the subject. Subsurface drip irrigation has been a part of drip irrigation development in the USA since its beginning about 1960, but interest has escalated since the early 1980s. Yield response for over 30 crops indicated that crop yield for subsurface drip was greater than or equal to that for other irrigation methods, including surface drip, and required less water in most cases. Lateral depths ranged from 0.02 to 0.70 m and lateral spacings ranged from 0.25 to 5.0 m. Several irrigation scheduling techniques, management strategies, crop water requirements, and water use efficiencies were discussed. Injection of nutrients, pesticides, and other chemicals to modify water and soil conditions is an important component of subsurface drip irrigation. Some mathematical models that simulate water movement in subsurface drip systems were included Uniformity measurements and methods, a limited assessment of root intrusion into emitters, and estimates of overall system longevity were also discussed. Sufficient information exists to provide general guidance with regard to design, installation, and management of subsurface drip irrigation systems. A significant body of information is available to assist in determining relative advantages and disadvantages of this technology in comparison with other irrigation types. Subsurface drip provides a more efficient delivery system if water and nutrient applications are managed properly. Waste water application, especially for turf and landscape plants, offers great potential Profitability and economic aspects have not been determined conclusively and will depend greatly on local conditions and constraints, especially availability and cost of water.