• Authors:
    • Norwood, C.
    • Currie, R.
  • Source: Journal of Production Agriculture
  • Volume: 10
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 1997
  • Summary: Dryland crop yields in the U.S. Great Plains are limited by low precipitation and high potential evapotranspiration. In western Kansas wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and grain sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] are grown commonly, whereas corn (Zea mays L.) is believed to lack sufficient drought and heat tolerance for dryland production. A study was conducted near Garden City, KS, from 1991 through 1995 to determine whether corn could be grown successfully. No-till (NT) and conventional-till (CT) corn and grain sorghum were compared. In the driest year, sorghum yielded 137% more than corn with CT and 85% more with NT, but in 3 of 5 yr, NT corn yielded from 34% to 112% more than NT sorghum. In the remaining year, CT sorghum yielded more than CT corn, but NT yields did not differ. Overall, NT increased corn yields by 28% and net return by 69%, but increased sorghum yields by only 11% add had no effect on net return. No-till corn yielded 28% more than NT sorghum and produced 169% more net return, whereas CT corn yielded 11% more than CT sorghum and produced 48% more net return. Dryland corn can be grown in western Kansas if lower yields and returns are accepted in dry years in exchange for yields and returns considerably higher than those of sorghum in favorable years. No tillage will substantially increase yields in most years and is essential to assure adequate corn yields in dry years.
  • Authors:
    • Unger, P. W.
    • Torbert, H. A.
    • Jones, O. R.
    • Potter, . N.
  • Source: Soil Science
  • Volume: 162
  • Issue: 2
  • Year: 1997
  • Summary: Limited information is available regarding soil organic carbon (SOC) distribution and the total amounts that occur in dryland cropping situations in semiarid regions. We determined crop rotation, tillage, and fertilizer effects on SOC distribution and mass in the semiarid southern Great Plains. A cropping system study was conducted for 10-years at Bushland, TX, to compare no-till and stubblemulch management on four dryland cropping systems: continuous wheat (CW) (Triticum aestivum L.); continuous grain sorghum (CS) (Sorghum bicolor [L.] Moench.); wheat/fallow/sorghum/fallow (WSF); and wheat/fallow (WF). Fertilizer (45 kg N ha-1) was added at crop planting to main plots. Subplots within each tillage and cropping treatment combination received no fertilizer. Ten years after treatment initiation, soil cores were taken incrementally to a 65-cm depth and subdivided for bulk density and SOC determination. The no-till treatments resulted in significant differences in SOC distribution in the soil profile compared with stubblemulch tillage in all four crop rotations, although differences were largest in the continuous cropping systems. Continuous wheat averaged 1.71% SOC in the surface 2 cm of soil compared with 1.02% SOC with stubblemulch tillage. Continuous sorghum averaged 1.54% SOC in the surface 2 cm of soil in no-till compared with 0.97% SOC with stubblemulch tillage. Total SOC content in the surface 20 cm was increased 5.6 t C ha-1 in the CW no-till treatment and 2.8 t C ha-1 in the CS no-till treatment compared with the stubblemulch treatment. Differences were not significantly different between tillage treatments in the WF and WSF systems. No-till management with continuous crops sequestered carbon in comparison to stubblemulch management on the southern Great Plains. Fallow limits carbon accumulation., (C) Williams & Wilkins 1997. All Rights Reserved.
  • Authors:
    • Dick, W. A.
    • Jacinthe P. -A.
  • Source: Soil & Tillage Research
  • Volume: 41
  • Issue: 3-4
  • Year: 1997
  • Summary: Nitrous oxide (N2O) is an important atmospheric trace gas due to its involvement in the postulated global warming phenomenon and in the depletion of the ozone layer. Widespread concern has been triggered by recent reports of increased atmospheric N2O concentration. Since agriculture has been implicated as one contributor to that increase, a monitoring program was undertaken during the 1993 and 1994 cropping season (May-October) to evaluate the effect of several soil management practices on N2O emission from soil. Our results show that rates of N2O emission were generally near baseline levels during most sampling occasions. Major, but short-lived, fluxes of N2O were observed after rainfall events and during the days immediately following fertilizer application. It was during these times that most of the seasonal N2O loss occurred. An excellent relationship was found between seasonal N2O loss (y) and the maximum daily flux of N2O (x) during a season (y = -0.4x2 + 43.1x + 338, r2 = 0.89, P < 0.0001). The N2O emission data were log normally distributed for both years. Average daily emissions of N2O were 6.9 ± 6.3 g (range, 0.3 - 74.7 g) N2O---N ha-1 day-1 and 17.6 ± 10.5 g (range, 0.1-326 g) N2O---N ha-1 day-1 during the 1993 and 1994 seasons, respectively. Seasonal N2O---N losses were, in general, highest in the continuous corn (CC) (Zea mays L.) plots and lowest in the soybean (Glycine max L.) plots of the corn/soybean/wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)-hairy vetch (Vicia villosa Roth) rotation (CSW-V). Average N loss as N2O during a cropping season was between 0.6 kg (for the soybean crop of the CSWV rotation and ridge till treatment) and 3.7 kg N2O---N ha-1 year-1, (for the CC rotation and the chisel till treatment). Approximately 0.5-3% of the inorganic N fertilizer added was lost as N2O. Our data show that seasonal N2O---N loss from chisel-till plots were generally significantly higher than from no-till or ridge till plots.
  • Authors:
    • Lal, R.
  • Source: Soil & Tillage Research
  • Volume: 43
  • Issue: 1-2
  • Year: 1997
  • Summary: This manuscript reviews the potential impact of residue management, conservation tillage and soil restoration on carbon sequestration in world soils. The greenhouse effect is among four principal ecological issues of global concern that include: (i) adequacy of land resources to meet needs of present and future generations; (ii) role of world soils and agricultural practices in the "greenhouse" effect; (iii) potential of crop residue management, restoration of degraded soils, and conservation tillage in carbon sequestration in soil; and (iv) minimizing risks of soil degradation by enhancing soil resilience and soil quality. Annual increase in CO, concentration in the atmosphere is 3.2 X 1015 g, and there exists a potential to mitigate this effect through C sequestration in soils. Just as world soils are an important active pool of organic carbon and play a major role in the global carbon cycle, crop residue is a major renewable resource which also has an important impact on the global carbon cycle. I have estimated the annual production of crop residue to be about 3.4 billion Mg in the world. If 15% of C contained in the residue can be converted to passive soil organic carbon (SOC) fraction, it may lead to C sequestration at the rate of 0.2 X 1015 g/yr. Similarly restoring presently degraded soils, estimated at about 2.0 billion ha, and increasing SOC content by 0.01%/yr may lead C sequestration at the rate of 3.0 Pg C/yr. Conservation tillage is an important tool for crop residue management, restoration of degraded soil, and for enhancing C sequestration in soil. Conservation tillage, any tillage system that maintains at least 30% of the soil surface covered by residue, was practised in 1995 on about 40 X 106 ha or 35.5% of planted area in USA. It is projected that by the year 2020, conservation tillage may be adopted on 75% of cropland in USA (140 X 106 ha), 50% in other developed countries (225 X 106 ha), and 25% in developing countries (172 X 106 ha). The projected conversion of conventional to conservation tillage may lead to a global C sequestration by 2020 at a low estimate of 1.5 X 1015 g, and at a high estimate of 4.9 X 1015 g of C. These potentials of C sequestration can be realized through adoption of regional, national and global soil policy that stipulate appropriate use of world soil resources.
  • Authors:
    • Kissel, D. E.
    • Havlin, J. L.
  • Source: Soil Organic Matter in Temperate Agroecosystems: Long-Term Experiments in North America
  • Volume: 1
  • Year: 1997
  • Authors:
    • Martel, J.
    • Beyaert, R. P.
    • Donald, R. G.
    • Simard, R. R.
    • Voroney, R. P.
    • Liang, B. C.
    • Drury, C. F.
    • Gregorich, E. G.
    • Carter, M. R.
    • Bolinder, M. A.
    • Angers, D. A.
  • Source: Soil & Tillage Research
  • Volume: 41
  • Issue: 3-4
  • Year: 1997
  • Summary: Soil organic matter storage capacity in agroecosystems varies with soil type, climate and agricultural management practices. The effects of different tillage systems on organic C and N storage were determined for a range of soils of eastern Canada mainly under continuous corn and small grain cereal production. Soil profiles from eight sites on which comparative tillage experiments had been performed for up to 11 years were sampled to a 60 cm depth in four increments (0-10, 10-20, 20-40 and 40-60cm). Organic C and N contents and dry bulk density were determined for each sampling depth. Bulk density measurements showed that the total soil mass in the soil profiles was not influenced by the tillage systems. No significant differences were found between tillage treatments in the total organic C and N storage down to 60 cm depth; the soil profiles under no-till (NT) and chisel plowing (CP) generally did not contain more C and N than those under conventional moldboard plowing (MP). However, the depth distribution of soil C and N varied with tillage. In the surface 0-10cm, C and N contents were higher under NT than under MP, whereas at deeper levels (20-40cm) the reverse trend was observed. It is concluded than under eastern Canadian conditions, where crop production and residue inputs are not affected by tillage, reduced tillage systems would not result in the storage of more soil organic matter in the entire soil profile at least in a 5-10 year period. Placement of the residues would be a major factor influencing the C and N distribution at specific depths.
  • Authors:
    • Tanaka, D. L.
    • Black, A. L.
  • Source: Soil Organic Matter in Temperate Agroecosystems
  • Year: 1997
  • Authors:
    • Bauer, P. J.
    • Hunt, P. G.
    • Matheny, T. A.
  • Source: Journal of Production Agriculture
  • Volume: 10
  • Issue: 3
  • Year: 1997
  • Summary: Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) production has dramatically increased in the Southeast, but the role of conservation tillage in doublecropped cotton systems has not been clearly defined. Therefore, from 1988 to 1994, we investigated doublecropped wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and cotton on plots that had been in continuous conservation vs. conventional tillage since 1979. The experimental site wits located near Florence, SC, on a Norfolk loamy sand (fine-loamy, siliceous, thermic Typic Kandiudult). Conventional tillage consisted of multiple diskings and cultivations; surface tillage was eliminated for conservation tillage. Wheat yields were not significantly affected by tillage, but cotton yields were significantly higher for conservation tillage (P less than or equal to 0.01). Cotton planting dates ranged from 7 to 18 June, and 5 of the 7 yr had more than 145 frost-free days. Two years had crop failure because of early freezes, and a June drought prevented the planting of cotton in 1 yr. In the 4 yr with harvestable yields, seed cotton yields among the eight cultivars ranged from about 500 to 2200 and 300 to 1850 lb/acre for conservation and conventional tillage, respectively. The early maturing cultivar, 'Deltapine (DP) 20,' had the highest seed cotton yields with means of 1442 and 1123 lb/acre for conservation and conventional tillage, respectively Development of earlier maturing cotton and wheat cultivars will be important for this cropping system in the northern Coastal Plain portion of the Cotton Belt.
  • Authors:
    • Walters, D. T.
    • Kessavalou, A.
  • Source: Agronomy Journal
  • Volume: 89
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 1997
  • Summary: Rotation of corn (Zea mays L.) with soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] provides certain economic and environmental advantages over monoculture corn. Low soybean residue production and persistence, however, promote potentially excessive soil erosion following soybean harvest. An irrigated field experiment was conducted in eastern Nebraska for 4 yr (1990-1993) under various tillage treatments and N rates to evaluate the effects of a winter rye (Secale cereale L.) cover crop following soybean on (i) rye dry matter yield, (ii) surface residue cover for erosion protection, and (iii) corn establishment and production. The soil was a Sharpsburg silty clay loam (fine, montmorillonitic, mesic Typic Argiudolls). Treatments were (i) no-tillage and disk tillage; (ii) corn following soybean with a winter rye cover crop (CBR), corn following soybean without rye (CB) and corn following corn (CC); and (iii) 0, 50, 100, 150, and 300 kg N ha(-1) (applied to corn). Rye aboveground dry matter yield, surface residue cover, and corn yield parameters were estimated. Rye dry matter yield ranged from 0.25 to 2.9 Mg ha(-1) and was influenced by tillage, N rate, and weather conditions in different years. During the years of high rye dry matter yield, presence of rye in the corn-soybean system gave approximately 16% additional surface residue cover prior to planting through cultivation, compared with soybean residue alone. Surface cover by rye and soybean residues in CBR was equivalent to corn residue in CC under both disk and no-till management. In 1 of the 3 yr, corn plant population and grain yield were reduced following rye (CBR) compared with the no rye system (CB), possibly due to apparent allelopathic effects related to the age of rye. No significant difference in N response was observed between CBR and CB corn yields. In general, rotation of corn with soybean (with and without rye) resulted in an increase of approximately 27% in corn grain yield and N uptake over continuous corn. During the years of high rye dry matter production, rye accumulated approximately 45 kg N ha(-1) through aboveground dry matter. Overall, including a winter rye cover crop in the corn-soybean rotation system was beneficial.
  • Authors:
    • Unger, P. W.
    • Alemu, G.
    • Jones, O. R.
  • Source: Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis
  • Volume: 28
  • Issue: 1-2
  • Year: 1997
  • Summary: Soil and water conserving practices must be used to sustain dryland crop production in semiarid regions. In this 1994 study, we evaluated the effects of different cropping system and tillage method treatments on surface residue cover, organic matter content, aggregation, and water infiltration for a soil used for grain sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] production in the United States Southern Great Plains from 1982 to 1994. Cropping systems were continuous sorghum (CS) and winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)-fallow-grain sorghum-fallow (designated WSF) and tillage methods were no-tillage (NT) and stubble mulch tillage (SMT). Treatments were CS-NT, CS-SMT, WSF-NT, and WSF-SMT. Surface residue cover before planting sorghum was >70% with CS-NT and WSF-NT, 29% with CS-SMT, and 12% with WSF-SMT. Surface cover after planting was approximate to 50% with both NT treatments, whereas amounts with other treatments were similar to those before planting. Soil organic matter contents (0- to 10-cm depth) were greater on CS than on WSF plots, but were not affected by tillage method in either cropping system. Water stable aggregation (0- to 2-cm depth) was greater with SMT than with NT in both cropping systems, but differences between cropping systems were not significant. Dry aggregates were smaller with NT than with SMT. Water infiltration was or tended to be greater on CS than on WSF plots, apparently because the WSF plots contained more water when infiltration was measured. Infiltration was not affected by tillage method, apparently because the greater amount of surface residues on NT plots counteracted the less water stable aggregates and smaller dry aggregates that had potential for reducing infiltration on the NT plots. This study indicates that no cropping system-tillage method combination treatment had a consistently beneficial or detrimental effect on soil conditions. In conclusion, both cropping systems (CS and WSF) and both tillage methods (NT and SMT) are suitable for conserving soil and water resources and, therefore, for sustaining dryland crop production in the semiarid United States Southern Great Plains.