Inicio  /  Agriculture  /  Vol: 14 Par: 3 (2024)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The Effect of Long-Term Crop Rotations for the Soil Carbon Sequestration Rate Potential and Cereal Yield

Lina Skinuliene    
Au?ra Marcinkeviciene    
Mindaugas Dorelis and Vaclovas Bogu?as    

Resumen

Depending on the type of agricultural use and applied crop rotation, soil organic carbon accumulation may depend, which can lead to less CO2 fixation in the global carbon cycle. Less is known about organic carbon emissions in different crop production systems (cereals, grasses) using different agrotechnologies. There is a lack of more detailed studies on the influence of carbon content in the soil on plant productivity, as well as the links between the physical properties of the soil and the absorption, viability, and emission of greenhouse gases (GHG) from mineral fertilizers. The aim of this study is to estimate the long-term effect of soil organic carbon sequestration potential in different crop rotations. The greatest potential for organic carbon sequestration is Norfolk-type crop rotation, where crops that reduce soil fertility are replaced by crops that increase soil fertility every year. Soil carbon sequestration potential was significantly higher (46.72%) compared with continuous black fallow and significantly higher from 27.70 to 14.19% compared with field with row crops and cereal crop rotations, respectively, intensive crop rotation saturated with intermediate crops. In terms of carbon sequestration, it is most effective to keep perennial grasses for one year while the soil is still full of undecomposed cereal straw from the previous crop. Black fallow without manure fertilization, compared to crop rotation, reduces the amount of organic carbon in the soil up to two times, the carbon management index by 2?5 times, and poses the greatest risk to the potential of carbon sequestration in agriculture.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Ying Xu, Zhenhua Yu, Yansheng Li, Jian Jin, Xingyi Zhang, Guanghua Wang and Xiaobing Liu    
Crop removal of cations and anions is one of the main factors causing soil acidification. Mollisols, also known as black soils, which are inherently neutral soils, have been acidified due to irrational land use. However, the magnitude of acidification of... ver más
Revista: Agronomy

 
Lijun Li, He Li, Lihong Tong and Yizhong Lv    
It is desirable to recycle sewage sludge as fertilizer for agricultural fields. The application of sludge to agricultural soils is a measure that replaces chemical fertilizers and plays an important role in improving soil?s physicochemical and biological... ver más
Revista: Agronomy

 
Yuanyuan Zhang, Youxin Yu, Meiqi Xu, Jingyan Liao, Chenjia Shao, Liran Fu, Mingshi Qian, Gang Xu and Guoqing Yang    
The rice stripe virus (RSV) is transmitted by the small brown planthopper Laodelphax striatellus in a persistent and circulative?propagative manner. During the last few decades, RSV has caused serious disease outbreaks in rice fields in China. The result... ver más
Revista: Agronomy

 
Shun Zou, Chumin Huang, Yang Chen, Xiaolong Bai, Wangjun Li and Bin He    
Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) play crucial roles in tea planting, but information on how the long-term excessive application of chemical N fertilizer affected N and P in subtropical tea plantations remains limited. In this study, soil and leaf samples ... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Jie Li, Baobao Sun, Cheng Liu, Marios Drosos, Xuhui Zhang, Xiaoyu Liu, Lianqing Li and Genxing Pan    
Revista: Agriculture