• Authors:
    • Varvel, G. E.
  • Source: Soil Science Society of America Journal
  • Volume: 70
  • Issue: 2
  • Year: 2006
  • Summary: Sequestration and storage of carbon (C) by agricultural soils has been cited as one potential part of the solution to soil degradation and global climate change. However, C sequestration in soils is a slow and dynamic process. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of crop rotation and N fertilizer management on soil organic C (SOC) levels at several points in time during 18 yr of a long-term study in the Western Corn Belt. Seven cropping systems (three monoculture, two 2-yr, and two 4-yr rotations) with three levels of N fertilizer were compared. Soil samples were taken in the spring in 1984, 1992, 1998, and 2002 to a depth of 30 cm in 0- to 7.5-, 7.5- to 15-, and 15- to 30-cm increments. No differences were obtained in SOC levels in 1984 at the beginning of the study. After 8 yr, rotation significantly increased SOC 449 kg ha-1 across all cropping systems. From 1992 to 2002, SOC levels in the 0- to 7.5-cm depth decreased by 516 kg ha-1 across all cropping systems. Soil organic C levels in the 7.5- to 15-cm depths in 1992 and 2002 demonstrated similar rotation effects to those in the surface 0- to 7.5-cm, being not significantly affected from 1984 to 1992 but being significantly decreased from 1992 to 2002 (568 kg SOC ha-1 across all cropping systems). Many of the SOC gains in the surface 30 cm measured during the first 8 yr of the study were lost during the next 10 yr in all but the 4-yr cropping systems after 18 yr. The loss of SOC in this latter period occurred when depth of tillage was increased by using a tandem disk with larger-diameter disks. These results demonstrate that more than one point-in-time measurement from long-term experiments is necessary to monitor SOC changes when several management variables, such as cropping system and N fertilizer, are being used. They also indicate that apparent small changes in cultural practices, such as in depth of tillage in this experiment, can significantly change SOC dynamics in the soil. Subtle changes in cultural practices (e.g., tillage depth) can have significant long-term results, but long-term experiments are required to quantify their impact under variable climatic conditions.
  • Authors:
    • Spokas, K. A.
    • Dolan, M. S.
    • Baker, J. M.
    • Venterea, R. T.
  • Source: Soil Science Society of America Journal
  • Volume: 70
  • Issue: 5
  • Year: 2006
  • Summary: Few studies have examined the impacts of rotational tillage regimes on soil carbon (C) and nitrogen (N). We measured the C and N content of soils managed under corn (Zea mays L.)-soybean (Glycine max L.) rotation following 10 and 15 yr of treatments. A conventional tillage (CT) regime employing moldboard and chisel plowing in alternate years was compared with both continuous no-till (NT) and biennial tillage (BT), which employed chisel plowing before soybean only. While masses of C and N in the upper 0.3 m under both BT and NT were higher than CT, only the BT treatment differed from CT when the entire sampled depth (0.6 m) was considered. Decreased C inputs, as indicated by reduced grain yields, may have limited C storage in the NT system. Thus, while more C was apparently retained under NT per unit of C input, some tillage appears necessary in this climate and cropping system to maximize C storage. Soil carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes under NT were greater than CT during a drier than normal year, suggesting that C storage may also be partly constrained under NT due to wetter conditions that promote increased soil respiration. Increased temperature sensitivity of soil respiration with increasing soil moisture was also observed. These findings indicate that long-term biennial chisel plowing for corn-soybean in the upper mid-west USA can enhance C storage, reduce tillage-related fuel costs, and maintain yields compared with more intensive annual tillage.
  • Authors:
    • Hegymegi, P.
    • Gal, A.
    • Smith, D. R.
    • Omonode, R.A.
    • Vyn, T. J.
  • Source: 17th Triennial Conference of the International Soil Tillage Research Organisation (ISTRO)Conference Proceedings
  • Year: 2006
  • Summary: Few researchers have assessed the possibly interacting effects of long-term tillage and rotation practices on organic carbon (OC) sequestration in soil to depths well beyond the maximum depth of tillage operations while also studying carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from the soil surface of those same experiments. This study was conducted from 2003 to 2005 on tillage and rotation experiments initiated 30 yrs ago in West-Central Indiana on a dark prairie soil with silty clay loam texture.. Our objectives were to determine how tillage systems such as moldboard plow (MP), chisel (CP), and no-till affected OC retention and surface soil CO2 emissions. These tillage systems were investigated in continuous corn and corn-soybean rotations. Soil OC distribution was determined from soil cores in multiple increments to a 1.0 m depth in late 2003 and early 2004. Gas fluxes from the soil surface were measured at weekly or biweekly intervals for up to 14 weeks in the corn growing seasons of 2004 and 2005. The increase in soil OC with no-till relative to moldboard plow averaged just 8 t/ha (or 5% on an equivalent mass basis) in both rotations. Rotation systems had little impact on OC; continuous corn was not superior to the soybean-corn rotation in either no-till or moldboard plow systems. While no-till clearly resulted in more OC and N accumulation in the surface 15 cm than moldboard plow, the relative no-till advantage declined sharply with depth. Indeed, moldboard plowing resulted in substantially more OC, relative to no-till, in the 30-50 cm depth interval despite moldboard plowing consistently to less than a 25 cm depth. Growing season CO2 emissions were significantly affected by rotation but not by tillage treatments. . CO2 emission was higher under continuous corn than with corn following soybean. Our results suggest that conclusions about soil OC gains under long-term no-till are highly dependent on sampling depth and, therefore, tillage comparisons should be based on samples taken much deeper than the deepest depth of direct soil disturbance by tillage implements. After 3 decades of consistent tillage and crop rotation management, tillage system impacts on overall soil OC retention and seasonal CO2 emissions were less than expected. Continuous corn did not store more soil OC than rotation corn, perhaps because continuous corn emitted more CO2 from the soil surface than corn- soybean rotation systems.
  • Authors:
    • Janzen, H. H.
  • Source: Soil Biology and Biochemistry
  • Volume: 38
  • Issue: 3
  • Year: 2006
  • Summary: Rapidly rising concentrations of atmospheric CO2 have prompted a flurry of studies on soils as potential carbon (C) 'sinks'. Sequestering C in soils is often seen as a 'win-win' proposition; it not only removes excess CO2 from the air, but also improves soils by augmenting organic matter, an energy and nutrient source for biota. But organic matter is most useful, biologically, when it decays. So we face a dilemma: can we both conserve organic matter and profit from its decay? Or must we choose one or the other? In this essay, I contemplate the merits, first of building soil C and then of decaying (losing) it, partly from a historical perspective. I then consider the apparent trade-off between accrual and decay, and reflect on how the dilemma might be resolved or assuaged. These fledgling thoughts, offered mostly to stir more fruitful debate, include: finding ways to increase C inputs to soil; seeking to optimize the timing of decay; and understanding better, from an ecosystem perspective, the flows of C, rather than only the stocks. Carbon sequestration is a sound and worthy goal. But soil organic matter is far more than a potential tank for impounding excess CO2; it is a relentless flow of C atoms, through a myriad of streams--some fast, some slow--wending their way through the ecosystem, driving biotic processes along the way. Now, when we aim to regain some of the C lost, we may need new ways of thinking about soil C dynamics, and tuning them for the services expected of our ecosystems. This objective, perhaps demanding more biology along with other disciplines, is especially urgent when we contemplate the stresses soon to be imposed by coming global changes.
  • Authors:
    • Rochette, P.
    • Pattey, E.
    • Newlands, N.
    • McAllister, T. A.
    • McGinn, S. M.
    • Masse, D.
    • Lemke, R.
    • Helgason, B. L.
    • Gregorich, E. G.
    • Gibb, D. J.
    • Ellert, B. H.
    • Dyer, J. A.
    • Desjardins, R. L.
    • Bolinder, M.
    • Boehm, M.
    • Angers, D. A.
    • Janzen, H. H.
    • Smith, W.
    • VandenBygaart, A. J.
    • Wang, H.
  • Source: Canadian Journal of Soil Science
  • Volume: 86
  • Issue: 3
  • Year: 2006
  • Summary: Greenhouse gas emissions from farms can be suppressed in two ways: by curtailing the release of these gases (especially N2O and CH4), and by storing more carbon in soils, thereby removing atmospheric COT But most practices have multiple interactive effects on emissions throughout a farm. We describe an approach for identifying practices that best reduce net, whole-farm emissions. We propose to develop a "Virtual Farm", a series of interconnected algorithms that predict net emissions from flows of carbon, nitrogen, and energy. The Virtual Farm would consist of three elements: descriptors, which characterize the farm; algorithms, which calculate emissions from components of the farm; and an integrator, which links the algorithms to each other and the descriptors, generating whole-farm estimates. Ideally, the Virtual Farm will be: boundary-explicit, with single farms as the fundamental unit; adaptable to diverse farm types; modular in design; simple and transparent; dependent on minimal, attainable inputs; internally consistent; compatible with models developed elsewhere; and dynamic ("seeing" into the past and the future). The Virtual Farm would be constructed via two parallel streams - measurement and modeling - conducted iteratively. The understanding built into the Virtual Farm may eventually be applied to issues beyond greenhouse gas mitigation.
  • Authors:
    • Bullock, D. G.
    • Hao, X.
    • Robertson, G. P.
    • Kravchenko, A. N.
  • Source: Agronomy Journal
  • Volume: 98
  • Issue: 6
  • Year: 2006
  • Summary: Lack of information about the spatial variability of soil C in different management systems limits accurate extrapolation of C sequestration findings to large scales. The objectives of this study were to: (i) describe and quantify variability of total C in three management systems, chisel-plow (CT) and no-till (NT) with conventional chemical inputs and a chisel-plow organic management practice with cover crops (CT-cover) 15 yr after conversion from conventional management; (ii) assess the strengths of spatial correlation in the three studied systems; and (iii) evaluate contributions of topography and texture to the overall total C variability and its spatial components. The data were collected at 12 60 by 60 m plots at the Long Term Ecological Research site, Kellogg Biological Station, MI. The data consisted of elevation measurements taken on a 2 by 5 m grid and a total of 1160 measurements of total C, sand, silt, and clay contents taken from the 0- to 5-cm depth. Overall variability of total C in NT was more than four times greater than in CT, and in CT-cover the variability was more than two times greater than CT. Spatial correlation of total C was the strongest in NT, followed by CT-cover, and then by CT. Stronger spatial structures in NT and CT-cover were found to form in response to topographical and texture gradients. Effects of texture were largely associated with topographical effects; however, even when topography was controlled for, texture still substantially contributed to explaining total C variability.
  • Authors:
    • Rolston, D. E.
    • van Kessel, C.
    • King, A. P.
    • Six, J.
    • Lee, J.
  • Source: Journal of Environmental Quality
  • Volume: 35
  • Issue: 3
  • Year: 2006
  • Summary: There is a lack of understanding of how associations among soil properties and management-induced changes control the variability of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from soil. We performed a laboratory investigation to quantify relationships between GHG emissions and soil indicators in an irrigated agricultural field under standard tillage (ST) and a field recently converted (2 yr) to no-tillage (NT). Soil cores (15-cm depth) were incubated at 25{degrees}C at field moisture content and 75% water holding capacity. Principal component analysis (PCA) identified that most of the variation of the measured soil properties was related to differences in soil C and N and soil water conditions under ST, but soil texture and bulk density under NT. This trend became more apparent after irrigation. However, principal component regression (PCR) suggested that soil physical properties or total C and N were less important in controlling GHG emissions across tillage systems. The CO2 flux was more strongly determined by microbial biomass under ST and inorganic N content under NT than soil physical properties. Similarly, N2O and CH4 fluxes were predominantly controlled by NO3- content and labile C and N availability in both ST and NT soils at field moisture content, and NH4+ content after irrigation. Our study indicates that the field-scale variability of GHG emissions is controlled primarily by biochemical parameters rather than physical parameters. Differences in the availability and type of C and N sources for microbial activity as affected by tillage and irrigation develop different levels and combinations of field-scale controls on GHG emissions.
  • Authors:
    • Zhang, F. S.
    • Halvorson, A. D.
    • Mosier, A. R.
    • Liu, X. J.
  • Source: Plant and Soil
  • Volume: 280
  • Issue: 1-2
  • Year: 2006
  • Summary: To evaluate the impact of N placement depth and no-till (NT) practice on the emissions of NO, N2O, CH4 and CO2 from soils, we conducted two N placement experiments in a long-term tillage experiment site in northeastern Colorado in 2004. Trace gas flux measurements were made 2-3 times per week, in zero-N fertilizer plots that were cropped continuously to corn (Zea mays L.) under conventional-till (CT) and NT. Three N placement depths, replicated four times (5, 10 and 15 cm in Exp. 1 and 0, 5 and 10 cm in Exp. 2, respectively) were used. Liquid urea-ammonium nitrate (UAN, 224 kg N ha)1) was injected to the desired depth in the CT- or NT-soils in each experiment. Mean flux rates of NO, N2O, CH4 and CO2 ranged from 3.9 to 5.2 lg N m)2 h)1, 60.5 to 92.4 lg N m)2 h)1, )0.8 to 0.5 lg C m)2 h)1, and 42.1 to 81.7 mg C m)2 h)1 in both experiments, respectively. Deep N placement (10 and 15 cm) resulted in lower NO and N2O emissions compared with shallow N placement (0 and 5 cm) while CH4 and CO2 emissions were not affected by N placement in either experiment. Compared with N placement at 5 cm, for instance, averaged N2O emissions from N placement at 10 cm were reduced by more than 50% in both experiments. Generally, NT decreased NO emission and CH4 oxidation but increased N2O emissions compared with CT irrespective of N placement depths. Total net global warming potential (GWP) for N2O, CH4 and CO2 was reduced by deep N placement only in Exp. 1 but was increased by NT in both experiments. The study results suggest that deep N placement (e.g., 10 cm) will be an effective option for reducing N oxide emissions and GWP from both fertilized CT- and NT-soils.
  • Authors:
    • Petrie, S.
    • Rhinhart, K.
    • Machado, S.
  • Source: Journal of Environmental Quality
  • Volume: 35
  • Issue: 4
  • Year: 2006
  • Summary: Soil organic carbon (SOC) has beneficial effects on soil quality and productivity. Cropping systems that maintain and/or improve levels of SOC may lead to sustainable crop production. This study evaluated the effects of long-term cropping systems on C sequestration. Soil samples were taken at 0- to 10-, 10- to 20-, 20- to 30-, and 30- to 40-cm soil depth profiles from grass pasture (GP), conventional tillage (CT) winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)-fallow (CTWF), and fertilized and unfertilized plots of continuous winter wheat (WW), spring wheat (SW), and spring barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) (SB) monocultures under CT and no-till (NT). The samples were analyzed for soil organic matter (SOM) and SOC was derived. Ages of experiments ranged from 6 to 73 yr. Compared to 1931 SOC levels (initial year), CTWF reduced SOC by 9 to 12 Mg ha-1 in the 0- to 30-cm zone. Grass pasture increased SOC by 6 Mg ha-1 in the 0- to 10-cm zone but decreased SOC by 3 Mg ha-1 in the 20- to 30-cm zone. Continuous CT monocultures depleted SOC in the top 0- to 10-cm zone and the bottom 20- to 40-cm zone but maintained SOC levels close to 1931 SOC levels in the 10- to 20-cm layer. Continuous NT monocultures accumulated more SOC in the 0- to 10-cm zone than in deeper zones. Total SOC (0- to 40-cm zone) was highest under GP and continuous cropping and lowest under CTWF. Fertilizer increased total SOC only under CTWW and CTSB by 13 and 7 Mg ha-1 in 13 yr, respectively. Practicing NT for only 6 yr had started to reverse the effect of 73 yr of CTWF. Compared to CTWF, NTWW and NTSW sequestered C at rates of 2.6 and 1.7 Mg ha-1 yr-1, respectively, in the 0- to 40-cm zone. This study showed that the potential to sequester C can be enhanced by increasing cropping frequency and eliminating tillage.
  • Authors:
    • Chhabra, B. S.
    • Wang, Z. H.
    • Lemke, R.
    • Malhi, S. S.
  • Source: Soil & Tillage Research
  • Volume: 90
  • Issue: 1-2
  • Year: 2006
  • Summary: Management practices that simultaneously improve soil properties and yield are crucial to sustain high crop production and minimize detrimental impact on the environment. The objective of this study was to determine the influence of tillage and crop residue management on crop yield, N uptake and C removal in crop, soil organic C and N, inorganic N and aggregation, and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions on a Gray Luvisol (Boralf) soil near Star City, Saskatchewan, Canada. The 4-year (1998-2001) field experiment was conducted with two tillage systems: no tillage (NT), and conventional tillage (CT); two levels of straw: straw retained (S), and straw removed (NS); and four rates of fertilizer N: 0, 40, 80, and 120 kg N ha-1, except no N to pea phase of the rotation. The plots were seeded to barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) in 1998, pea (Pisum sativum L.) in 1999, wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in 2000 and canola (Brassica napus L.) in 2001. Tillage and straw treatments generally had no effect on crop yield during the first three years. But in 2001, NT produced 55, 32, and 20% greater canola seed, straw and chaff than CT, respectively, whereas straw retention increased seed and straw yield by 33 and 19% compared to straw removal. Seed, straw and chaff yield of canola increased with N rate up to 40 kg N ha-1, and root mass (0-15 cm depth) with N rate to 80 kg N ha-1. Amount of N uptake and C removed in wheat and canola generally increased with N rate, but tillage and straw management had no consistent effect. After four crop seasons, total organic C (TOC) and N (TN), light fraction organic matter (LFOM), C (LFC), and N (LFN) were generally greater with S than NS treatments. Tillage did not affect TOC and TN in soil, but LFOM, LFC, and LFN were greater or tended to be greater under NT than CT. There was no effect of tillage, straw and N fertilization on NH4-N in soil, but CT and S tended to have higher NO3-N concentration in 0-15 cm soil than NT and NS, respectively. Concentration of NO3-N increased substantially with N rate >=80 kg ha-1. The NT + S treatment had the lowest proportion (34%) of wind-erodible (12.7 mm) dry aggregates, compared to highest (50%) and lowest (18%) proportion of corresponding aggregates in CT + NS, indicating less potential for soil erosion when tillage was omitted and crop residues were retained. Amount of N lost as N2O was higher from N-fertilized than from zero-N plots, and it was substantially higher from N-applied CT plots than from N-applied NT plots. Retaining crop residues along with no-tillage improved soil properties and may also be better for the environment.