- Authors:
- Seidel, R.
- Douds, D.
- Hanson, J.
- Hepperly, P.
- Pimentel, D.
- Source: BioScience
- Volume: 55
- Issue: 7
- Year: 2005
- Summary: Various organic technologies have been utilized for about 6000 years to make agriculture sustainable while conserving soil, water, energy, and biological resources. Among the benefits of organic technologies are higher soil organic matter and nitrogen, lower fossil energy inputs, yields similar to those of conventional systems, and conservation of soil moisture and water resources (especially advantageous under drought conditions). Conventional agriculture can be made more sustainable and ecologically sound by adopting some traditional organic farming technologies.
- Authors:
- Source: Agricultural Economics
- Volume: 32
- Issue: 1
- Year: 2005
- Authors:
- Ahuja, L. R.
- Westfall, D. G.
- Peterson, G. A.
- Sherrod, L. A.
- Source: Soil Science Society of America Journal
- Volume: 69
- Issue: 5
- Year: 2005
- Summary: Previous studies of no-till management in the Great Plains have shown that increased cropping intensity increased soil organic carbon (SOC). The objectives of this study were to (i) determine which soil C pools (active, slow, and passive) were impacted by cropping intensity after 12 yr of no-till across potential evapotranspiration (PET) and slope position gradients; (ii) relate C pool sizes to the levels found in total SOC; and (iii) determine C pool sizes relative to C levels found in a grass treatment (G). Cropping systems were wheat (Triticum aestivum)-fallow (WIT), wheat-corn (Zea mays L.)-fallow (WCF), wheat-corn-millet (Panicum miliaceum)-fallow (WCMF), and continuous cropping (CC) at three PET sites in Colorado. Active C (Soil microbial biomass C [SMBC]); and slow pool C (particulate organic matter C; POM-C) increased as cropping intensity increased, dependent on PET. Passive C (mineral associated organic C [MAOC]) was strongly influenced by a site-by-slope position interaction but not by cropping system. Toeslope soils had 35% higher POM-C compared with summits and sideslopes. All C pools were strongly correlated with total SOC, with the variability decreasing as C pool turnover time increased. Carbon pool sizes in cropping systems relative to levels found in G were independently influenced by cropping system. The highest were found in the CC system, which had 91, 78, and 90% of the amounts of C found in the perennial G system in the active, slow, and passive C pools, respectively.
- Authors:
- Dell, C. J.
- Venterea, R. T.
- Sauer, T. J.
- Allmaras, R. R.
- Reicosky, D. C.
- Johnson, J. M. F
- Source: Soil & Tillage Research
- Volume: 83
- Issue: 1
- Year: 2005
- Summary: The central USA contains some of the most productive agricultural land of the world. Due to the high proportion of land area committed to crops and pasture in this region, the carbon (C) stored and greenhouse gas (GHG) emission due to agriculture represent a large percentage of the total for the USA. Our objective was to summarize potential soil organic C (SOC) sequestration and GHG emission from this region and identify how tillage and cropping system interact to modify these processes. Conservation tillage (CST), including no-tillage (NT), has become more widespread in the region abating erosion and loss of organic rich topsoil and sequestering SOC. The rate of SOC storage in NT compared to conventional tillage (CT) has been significant, but variable, averaging 0.40 ± 0.61 Mg C ha-1 year-1 (44 treatment pairs). Conversion of previous cropland to grass with the conservation reserve program increased SOC sequestration by 0.56 ± 0.60 Mg C ha-1 year-1 (five treatment pairs). The relatively few data on GHG emission from cropland and managed grazing land in the central USA suggests a need for more research to better understand the interactions of tillage, cropping system and fertilization on SOC sequestration and GHG emission.
- Authors:
- Burke, I. C.
- McCulley, R. L.
- Kaye, J. P.
- Source: Global Change Biology
- Volume: 11
- Issue: 4
- Year: 2005
- Summary: Urban ecosystems are expanding globally, and assessing the ecological consequences of urbanization is critical to understanding the biology of local and global change related to land use. We measured carbon (C) fluxes, nitrogen (N) cycling, and soil microbial community structure in a replicated (n=3) field experiment comparing urban lawns to corn, wheat-fallow, and unmanaged shortgrass steppe ecosystems in northern Colorado. The urban and corn sites were irrigated and fertilized. Wheat and shortgrass steppe sites were not fertilized or irrigated. Aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP) in urban ecosystems (383 +/- 11 C m(-2) yr(-1)) was four to five times greater than wheat or shortgrass steppe but significantly less than corn (537 +/- 44 C m(-2) yr(-1)). Soil respiration (2777 +/- 273 g C m(-2) yr(-1)) and total belowground C allocation (2602 +/- 269 g C m(-2) yr(-1)) in urban ecosystems were both 2.5 to five times greater than any other land-use type. We estimate that for a large (1578 km(2)) portion of Larimer County, Colorado, urban lawns occupying 6.4% of the land area account for up to 30% of regional ANPP and 24% of regional soil respiration from land-use types that we sampled. The rate of N cycling from urban lawn mower clippings to the soil surface was comparable with the rate of N export in harvested corn (both similar to 12-15 g N m(-2) yr(-1)). A one-time measurement of microbial community structure via phospholipid fatty acid analysis suggested that land-use type had a large impact on microbial biomass and a small impact on the relative abundance of broad taxonomic groups of microorganisms. Our data are consistent with several other studies suggesting that urbanization of arid and semiarid ecosystems leads to enhanced C cycling rates that alter regional C budgets.
- Authors:
- Source: Environment International
- Volume: 31
- Issue: 4
- Year: 2005
- Summary: Reducing and off-setting anthropogenic emissions of CO, and other greenhouse gases (GHGs) are important strategies of mitigating the greenhouse effect. Thus, the need for developing carbon (C) neutral and renewable sources of energy is more than ever before. Use of crop residue as a possible source of feedstock for bioenergy production must be critically and objectively assessed because of its positive impact on soil C sequestration.. soil quality maintenance and ecosystem functions. The amount of crop residue produced in the US is estimated at 367x10(6) Mg/year for 9 cereal crops, 450x10(6) Mg/year for 14 cereals and legumes, and 488x10(6) Mg/year for 21 crops. The amount of crop residue produced in the world is estimated at 2802x10(6) Mg/year for cereal crops, 3107x10(6) Mg/year for 17 cereals and legumes, and 3758x10(6) Mg/year for 27 food crops. The fuel value of the total annual residue produced is estimated at 1.5x10(15) kcal, about 1 billion barrels (bbl) of diesel equivalent, or about 8 quads for the US; and 11.3x10(15) kcal, about 7.5 billion bbl of diesel or 60 quads for the world. However, even a partial removal (30-40%) of crop residue from land can exacerbate soil erosion hazard, deplete the SOC pool, accentuate emission of CO, and other GHGs from soil to the atmosphere, and exacerbate the risks of global climate change. Therefore, establishing bioenergy plantations of site-specific species with potential of producing 10-15 Mg biomass/year is an option that needs to be considered. This option will require 40-60 million hectares of land in the US and about 250 million hectares worldwide to establish bioenergy plantations. (c) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Authors:
- Schuman, G. E.
- Gollany, H. T.
- Ellert, B. H.
- Reeder, J. D.
- Morgan, J. A.
- Liebig, M. A.
- Source: Soil & Tillage Research
- Volume: 83
- Issue: 1
- Year: 2005
- Summary: Concern over human impact on the global environment has generated increased interest in quantifying agricultural contributions to greenhouse gas fluxes. As part of a research effort called GRACEnet (Greenhouse Gas Reduction through Agricultural Carbon Enhancement Network), this paper summarizes available information concerning management effects on soil organic carbon (SOC) and carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrous oxide (N2O), and methane (CH4) fluxes in cropland and rangeland in northwestern USA and western Canada, a region characterized by its inherently productive soils and highly variable climate. Continuous cropping under no-tillage in the region increased SOC by 0.27 ± 0.19 Mg C ha-1 yr-1, which is similar to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) estimate for net annual change in C stocks from improved cropland management. Soil organic C sequestration potential for rangelands was highly variable due to the diversity of plant communities, soils, and landscapes, underscoring the need for additional long-term C cycling research on rangeland. Despite high variability, grazing increased SOC by 0.16 ± 0.12 Mg C ha-1 yr-1 and converting cropland or reclaimed mineland to grass increased SOC by 0.94 ± 0.86 Mg C ha-1 yr-1. Although there was generally poor geographical coverage throughout the region with respect to estimates of N2O and CH4 flux, emission of N2O was greatest in irrigated cropland, followed by non-irrigated cropland, and rangeland. Rangeland and non-irrigated cropland appeared to be a sink for atmospheric CH4, but the size of this sink was difficult to determine given the few studies conducted. Researchers in the region are challenged to fill the large voids of knowledge regarding CO2, N2O, and CH4 flux from cropland and rangeland in the northwestern USA and western Canada, as well as integrate such data to determine the net effect of agricultural management on radiative forcing of the atmosphere.
- Authors:
- VandenBygaart, A. J.
- Angers, D. A.
- Rochette, P.
- Gregorich, E. G.
- Source: Soil & Tillage Research
- Volume: 83
- Issue: 1
- Year: 2005
- Summary: Agricultural soils can constitute either a net source or sink of the three principal greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrous oxide (N2O), and methane (CH4). We compiled the most up-to-date information available on the contribution of agricultural soils to atmospheric levels of these gases and evaluated the mitigation potential of various management practices in eastern Canada and northeastern USA. Conversion of native ecosystems to arable cropping resulted in a loss of ~22% of the original soil organic carbon (C)--a release of about 123 Tg C to the atmosphere; drainage and cultivation of organic soils resulted in an additional release of about 15 Tg C. Management practices that enhance C storage in soil include fertilization and legume- and forage-based rotations. Adopting no-till did not always increase soil C. This apparent absence of no-till effects on C storage was attributed to the type and depth of tillage, soil climatic conditions, the quantity and quality of residue C inputs, and soil fauna. Emission of N2O from soil increased linearly with the amount of mineral nitrogen (N) fertilizer applied (0.0119 kg N2O-N kg N-1). Application of solid manure resulted in substantially lower N2O emission (0.99 kg N2O-N ha-1 year-1) than application of liquid manure (2.83 kg N2O-N ha-1 year-1) or mineral fertilizer (2.82 kg N2O-N ha-1 year-1). Systems containing legumes produced lower annual N2O emission than fertilized annual crops, suggesting that alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) and other legume forage crops be considered different from other crops when deriving national inventories of greenhouse gases from agricultural systems. Plowing manure or crop stubble into the soil in the autumn led to higher levels of N2O production (2.41 kg N2O-N ha-1 year-1) than if residues were left on the soil surface (1.19 kg N2O-N ha-1 year-1). Elevated N2O emission during freeze/thaw periods in winter and spring, suggests that annual N2O emission based only on growing-season measurements would be underestimated. Although measurements of CH4 fluxes are scant, it appears that agricultural soils in eastern Canada are a weak sink of CH4, and that this sink may be diminished through manuring. Although the influence of agricultural management on soil C storage and emission of greenhouse gases is significant, management practices often appear to involve offsets or tradeoffs, e.g., a particular practice may increase soil C storage but also increase emission of N2O. In addition, because of high variability, adequate spatial and temporal sampling are needed for accurate estimates of greenhouse gas flux and soil C stock. Therefore a full accounting of greenhouse gas contributions of agricultural soils is imperative for determining the true mitigation potential of management practices.
- Authors:
- Zentner, R. P.
- Liang, B. C.
- Sherrod, L.
- Gregorich, E. G.
- Paustian, K.
- Janzen, H. H.
- Campbell, C. A.
- Source: Agronomy Journal
- Volume: 97
- Issue: 2
- Year: 2005
- Summary: Summer fallow (fallow) is still widely used on the North American Great Plains to replenish soil moisture between crops. Our objective was to examine how fallowing affects soil organic carbon (SOC) in various agronomic and climate settings by reviewing long-term studies in the midwestern USA (five sites) and the Canadian prairies (17 sites). In most soils, SOC increased with cropping frequency though not usually in a linear fashion. In the Canadian studies, SOC response to tillage and cropping frequency varied with climate--in semiarid conditions, SOC gains under no-till were about 250 kg ha-1 yr-1 greater than for tilled systems regardless of cropping frequency; in subhumid environments, the advantage was about 50 kg ha-1 yr-1 for rotations with fallow but 250 kg ha-1 yr-1 with continuous cropping. Specific crops also influenced SOC: Replacing wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) with lentil (Lens culinaris Medikus) had little effect; replacing wheat with lower-yielding flax (Linum usitatismum L.) reduced SOC gains; and replacing wheat with erosion-preventing fall rye (Secale cereale L.) increased SOC gains. In unfertilized systems, cropping frequency did not affect SOC gains, but in fertilized systems, SOC gains often increased with cropping frequency. In a Colorado study (three sites each with three slope positions), SOC gains increased with cropping frequency, but the response tended to be highest at the lowest potential evaporation site (where residue C inputs were greatest) and least in the toeslope positions (despite their high residue C inputs). The Century and the Campbell et al. SOC models satisfactorily simulated the relative responses of SOC although they underestimated gains by about one-third.
- Authors:
- Source: Manitoba Agronomists Conference
- Year: 2005