• Authors:
    • Raper, R. L.
    • Wood, C. W.
    • Reeves, D. W.
    • Shaw, J. N.
    • Franzluebbers, A. J.
    • Causarano, H. J.
  • Source: Soil Science Society of America Journal
  • Volume: 72
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 2008
  • Summary: Quantification of the impact of long-term agricultural land use on soil organic C (SOC) is important to farmers and policyrnakers, but few studies have characterized land use and management effects on SOC across physiographic regions. We measured the distribution and total stock of SOC to a depth of 20 cm under conventional tillage (CvT), conservation tillage (CsT), and pasture in 87 production fields from the Southern Piedmont and Coastal Plain Major Land Resource Areas. Across locations, SOC at a depth of 0 to 20 cm was: pasture (38.9 Mg ha(-1)) > CsT (27.9 Mg ha(-1)) > CvT (22.2 Mg ha(-1)) (P <= 0.02). Variation in SOC was explained by management (41.6%), surface horizon clay content (5.2%), and mean annual temperature (1.0%). Higher clay content and cooler temperature contributed to higher SOC. Management affected SOC primarily at the soil surface (0-5 cm). All SOC fractions (i.e., total SOC, particulate organic C, soil microbial biomass C, and potential C mineralization) were strongly correlated across a diversity of soils and management systems (r = 0.85-0.96). The stratification ratio (concentration at the soil surface/concentration at a lower depth) of SOC fractions differed among management systems (P <= 0.0001), and was 4.2 to 6.1 under pastures, 2.6 to 4.7 under CsT and 1.4 to 2.4 under CvT; these results agree with a threshold value of 2 to distinguish historically degraded soils with improved soil conditions from degraded soils. This on-farm survey of SOC complements experimental data and shows that pastures and conservation tillage will lead to significant SOC sequestration throughout the region, resulting in improved soil quality and potential to mitigate CO2 emissions.
  • Authors:
    • Conklin, A. E.
    • Teasdale, J. R.
    • Cavigelli, M. A.
  • Source: Agronomy Journal
  • Volume: 100
  • Issue: 3
  • Year: 2008
  • Summary: Despite increasing interest in organic grain crop production, there is inadequate information regarding the performance of organically-produced grain crops in the United States, especially in Coastal Plain soils of the mid-Atlantic region. We report on corn (Zea mays L.), soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.], and wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) yields at the USDA-ARS Beltsville Farming Systems Project (FSP), a long-term cropping systems trial established in Maryland in 1996 to evaluate the sustainability of organic and conventional grain crop production. The five FSP cropping systems include a conventional no-till corn-soybean-wheat/soybean rotation (NT), a conventional chisel-till corn-soybean-wheat/soybean rotation (CT), a 2-yr organic corn-soybean rotation (Org2), a 3-yr organic corn-soybean-wheat rotation (Org3), and a 4- to 6-yr organic corn-soybean-wheat-hay rotation (Org4+). Average corn grain yield during 9 yr was similar in NT and CT (7.88 and 8.03 Mg ha-1, respectively) but yields in Org2, Org3, and Org4+ were, respectively, 41, 31, and 24% less than in CT. Low N availability explained, on average, 73% of yield losses in organic systems relative to CT while weed competition and plant population explained, on average, 23 and 4%, respectively, of these yield losses. The positive relationship between crop rotation length and corn yield among organic systems was related to increasing N availability and decreasing weed abundance with increasing rotation length. Soybean yield averaged 19% lower in the three organic systems (2.88 Mg ha-1) than in the conventional systems (3.57 Mg ha-1) and weed competition alone accounted for this difference. There were no consistent differences in wheat yield among cropping systems. Crop rotation length and complexity had little impact on soybean and wheat yields among organic systems. Results indicate that supplying adequate N for corn and controlling weeds in both corn and soybean are the biggest challenges to achieving equivalent yields between organic and conventional cropping systems.
  • Authors:
    • ClimateCHECK
  • Year: 2008
  • Summary: from summary: "The proposed Summerfallow Reduction Protocol is developed according to the ISO 14064-2 (International Standards Organization, 2006) standard as adapted in the Alberta Offset System. This Science Discussion Document provides scientific knowledge and policy framework to guide discussion and decision concerning the proposed Protocol at a Consultation Workshop.
  • Authors:
    • Conservation Technology Information Center
  • Year: 2008
  • Authors:
    • Eriksen-Hamel, N. S.
    • Angers, D. A.
  • Source: Soil Science Society of America Journal
  • Volume: 72
  • Issue: 5
  • Year: 2008
  • Summary: While the adoption of no-till (NT) usually leads to the accumulation of soil organic C (SOC) in the surface soil layers, a number of studies have shown that this effect is sometimes partly or completely offset by greater SOC content near the bottom of the plow layer under full-inversion tillage (FIT). Our purpose was to review the literature in which SOC profiles have been measured under paired NT and FIT situations. Only replicated and randomized studies directly comparing NT and FIT for >5 yr were considered. Profiles of SOC had to be measured to at least 30 cm. As expected, in most studies SOC content was significantly greater (P < 0.05) under NT than FIT in the surface soil layers. At the 21- to 25-cm soil depth, however, which corresponds to the mean plowing depth for the data set (23 cm), the average SOC content was significantly greater under FIT than NT. Moreover, under FIT, greater SOC content was observed just below the average depth of plowing (26-35 cm). On average, there was 4.9 Mg ha(-1) more SOC under NT than FIT (P = 0.03). Overall, this difference in favor of NT increased significantly but weakly with the duration of the experiment (R-2 = 0.15, P = 0.05). The relative accumulation of SOC at depth under FIT could not be related to soil or climatic variables. Furthermore, the organic matter accumulating at depth under FIT appeared to be present in relatively stable form, but this hypothesis and the mechanisms involved require further investigation.
  • Authors:
    • Leistritz, F. L.
    • Bangsund, D. A.
  • Source: Management of Environmental Quality: An International Journal
  • Volume: 19
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 2008
  • Summary: Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to identify and describe key economic and policy-related issues with regard to terrestrial C sequestration and provide an overview of the economics of C sequestration on agricultural soils in the USA. Design/methodology/approach - Recent economic literature on carbon sequestration was reviewed to gather insights on the role of agriculture in greenhouse gas emissions mitigation. Results from the most salient studies were presented in an attempt to highlight the general consensus on producer-level responses to C sequestration incentives and the likely mechanisms used to facilitate C sequestration activities on agricultural soils. Findings - The likely economic potential of agriculture to store soil C appears to be considerably less than the technical potential. Terrestrial C sequestration is a readily implementable option for mitigating greenhouse gas emissions and can provide mitigation comparable in cost to current abatement options in other industries. Despite considerable research to date, many aspects of terrestrial C sequestration in the USA are not well understood. Originality/value - The paper provides a useful synopsis of the terms and issues associated with C sequestration, and serves as an informative reference on the economics of C sequestration that will be useful as the USA debates future greenhouse gas emissions mitigation policies.
  • Authors:
    • Ngouajio, M.
    • Wang, G.
  • Source: Hortscience
  • Volume: 43
  • Issue: 6
  • Year: 2008
  • Summary: The effects of two cover crops [cereal rye ( Secale cereale L.) and oat ( Avena sativa L.)], four tillage systems [no tillage (NT), strip tillage (ST), conventional tillage with cover crops incorporated (CTC), and conventional tillage without cover crop (CTN)], and three pre-emergence herbicide rates (full rate, half rate, and no herbicide) on pickling cucumber ( Cucumis sativus L.) growth and production, weed populations, and the incidence of pythium fruit rot were studied. Weed infestations, cucumber establishment, and cucumber leaf chlorophyll content were similar between the rye and oat treatments. However, the oat treatment had higher cucumber fruit number and weight and a lower percentage of cucumber fruit infected with Pythium spp. compared with the rye treatment. The NT and CTC systems reduced cucumber stand and leaf chlorophyll content, but had equivalent cucumber fruit number and weight compared with CTN. The NT and ST had lower weed biomass and weed density than CTN and CTC. The NT also reduced the percentage of cucumber fruit affected with pythium compared with CTN and CTC. Reducing the pre-emergence herbicide rate by half did not affect weed control or cucumber fruit yield compared with the full rate. However, weeds escaping herbicide application were larger in the half-rate treatment. The experiments indicate that with the integration of cover crops and conservation tillage, it is possible to maintain cucumber yield while reducing both herbicide inputs (by 50%) and the incidence of fruit rot caused by Pythium spp. (by 32% to 60%).
  • Authors:
    • Fabian, E.
    • Pegoraro, R.
    • Bertol, I.
    • Zoldan Junior, W.
    • Zavaschi, E.
    • Vazquez, E.
  • Source: REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE CIENCIA DO SOLO
  • Volume: 32
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 2008
  • Summary: Surface soil roughness is affected by many factors, such as the residual effect of the soil management, tillage and rainfall erosivity and, together with the soil cover of crop residues, influences water erosion. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of a chiselling operation, together with rainfall erosivity, on soil surface roughness, from June 2005 to March 2006, in an aluminic Typical Hapludox, under the following soil management systems: bare soil under conventional tillage (BCT), cultivated soil under conventional tillage (CCT), no-tillage in a never-tilled soil with burnt plant residues (BNT), and traditional no-tillage (TNT). The crop sequence in the treatments CCT, BNT and TNT was black oat, soyabean, common vetch, maize, black oat, common bean, fodder radish, soyabean, common vetch, maize and black oat. Five simulated rain tests were applied, with a constant intensity of 64 mm h -1 and durations of 20, 30, 40, 50, and 60 min each. Natural rains during the experimental period accounted for 57 mm, between the 2nd and 3rd rainfall test; 21 mm, between the 3rd and 4th test; and, 30 mm, between the 4th and 5th test. The surface roughness was determined immediately before and immediately after the chiseling tillage, and immediately after each test of rain simulation. The original and linear soil surface roughness was not influenced by the management, unlike random roughness, at the end of a six-month fallow period. The original, linear and random roughness in different soil management systems was affected by a six-month fallow period, when the soil was subjected to chiselling. Random roughness was less influenced by soil slope than by tillage marks, which decreased with the increasing rainfall erosivity. The coefficient of decay of this kind of soil roughness was similar in the studied soil management systems under no tillage and conventional tillage.
  • Authors:
    • Hons, F.
    • Wright, A.
    • Dou, F.
  • Source: Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis
  • Volume: 39
  • Issue: 5/6
  • Year: 2008
  • Summary: Distribution of dissolved (DOC) and soil organic carbon (SOC) with depth may indicate soil and crop-management effects on subsurface soil C sequestration. The objectives of this study were to investigate impacts of conventional tillage (CT), no tillage (NT), and cropping sequence on the depth distribution of DOC, SOC, and total nitrogen (N) for a silty clay loam soil after 20 years of continuous sorghum cropping. Conventional tillage consisted of disking, chiseling, ridging, and residue incorporation into soil, while residues remained on the soil surface for NT. Soil was sampled from six depth intervals ranging from 0 to 105 cm. Tillage effects on DOC and total N were primarily observed at 0-5 cm, whereas cropping sequence effects were observed to 55 cm. Soil organic carbon (C) was higher under NT than CT at 0-5 cm but higher under CT for subsurface soils. Dissolved organic C, SOC, and total N were 37, 36, and 66%, respectively, greater under NT than CT at 0-5 cm, and 171, 659, and 837% greater at 0-5 than 80-105 cm. The DOC decreased with each depth increment and averaged 18% higher under a sorghum-wheat-soybean rotation than a continuous sorghum monoculture. Both SOC and total N were higher for sorghum-wheat-soybean than continuous sorghum from 0-55 cm. Conventional tillage increased SOC and DOC in subsurface soils for intensive crop rotations, indicating that assessment of C in subsurface soils may be important for determining effects of tillage practices and crop rotations on soil C sequestration.
  • Authors:
    • Sweeney, D.
    • Kelley, K.
  • Source: Crop Management
  • Issue: November
  • Year: 2008
  • Summary: Field studies were conducted from 1999 through 2004 in southeastern Kansas to evaluate the influence of tillage method [conventional (CT) and no-till (NT)], row spacing-population system (7.5-, 15-, and 30-inch rows planted at 225,000, 175,000, and 125,000 seeds/acre, respectively), and glyphosate application timing on soybean [ Glycine max (L.) Merr.] yield, weed control, and net economic returns. Herbicide treatments were: (i) preplant residual (pendimethalin) followed by glyphosate at 3 weeks after planting (WAP); (ii) glyphosate at 3 WAP; (iii) sequential glyphosate at 3 and 5 WAP; and (iv) glyphosate at 8 WAP. Soybean followed grain sorghum [ Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] in a 2-year rotation. Tillage method influenced yield very little. Narrower row spacing (7.5- and 15-inch) increased soybean yields 2 to 4 bu/acre in high-yielding environments compared to 30-inch rows and also provided greater weed control. Glyphosate applied sequentially (3 and 5 WAP) provided the highest weed control, but a single glyphosate application 3 WAP often produced the greatest net return, regardless of tillage or row spacing system. The results suggest that the adoption of NT planting will likely increase soybean net returns to a greater extent than reducing row spacing in the eastern Great Plains.