Inicio  /  Agriculture  /  Vol: 13 Par: 4 (2023)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The Effect of Reduced and Conventional Tillage Systems on Soil Aggregates and Organic Carbon Parameters of Different Soil Types

Erika Tobia?ová    
Joanna Lemanowicz    
Bozena Debska    
Martina Kunkelová and Juraj Sakác    

Resumen

Tillage is a significant type of soil intervention and should be conducted based on the specific soil type. The aim of this study was to determine the influence of different tillage intensities (RT: reduced tillage; CT: conventional tillage), which are correlated with carbon sequestration, on soil properties. The study areas included fields on real farms in Eutric Fluvisol (EF), Mollic Fluvisol (MF), Haplic Chernozem (HC), Haplic Luvisol (HL), Eutric Regosol (ER), Eutric Gleysol (EG), and Stagnic Planosol (SP). The effects of tillage systems depended on the soil type and were more evident in soil aggregates of more productive soils. Agronomically, the most valuable fractions of aggregates were dominant in more productive soils (EF, MF, HC) in the CT system and less dominant in less productive soils (HL, ER, EG, SP) in the RT system. Smaller aggregates (<0.5 mm), which indicate deterioration of soil properties, were negatively correlated with clay (r = -0.364, p < 0.01), total organic carbon (r = -0.245, p < 0.05), and stabile carbon fractions (r = -0.250, p < 0.05). In the case of soil organic carbon, tillage system was mainly correlated with soil texture. Tillage had no influence on soils with lower proportions of silt. On the whole, the suitability of the tillage system for a specific soil type depended on soil productivity and soil texture; however, EG was an exception and showed no differences in response to the tillage system used. The results of this study show that the main factors influencing the choice of tillage system are soil type and genesis, soil texture, and soil production ability.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Alexios Lolas, Aikaterini Molla, Konstantinos Georgiou, Chrysoula Apostologamvrou, Alexandra Petrotou and Konstantinos Skordas    
Mussel shells, with their calcium carbonate content, serve as a natural pH buffer, aiding in neutralizing acidic soils and, consequently, enhancing nutrient availability for plants. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of treating soils with ... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Ms. Sabina Raut, Mr. Santosh Shrestha, Mr. Saroj Koirala    

 
Ruiyun Yao, Ru Bai, Qingfan Yu, Yaqi Bao and Weiwei Yang    
In this study, we investigated the effect of partially substituting inorganic nitrogen with bio-organic fertiliser on the ?Tianhong2? Fuji apple planting in Xinjiang. Bio-organic fertiliser was applied, and nitrogen was reduced by 20% (T2), 40% (T3), and... ver más
Revista: Agronomy

 
Jian Han, Li Xing, Chuang Zhang, Jundi Li, Yannan Li, Yuming Zhang, Hongbo He, Chunsheng Hu, Xiaoxin Li, Lijuan Zhang, Wenxu Dong, Shuping Qin and Xiuping Liu    
Microbial residue nitrogen can indicate soil quality and is crucial for soil nitrogen retention and supply. However, it is still unclear how the dynamic changes in soil microbial residue nitrogen affect crop nitrogen uptake in agricultural practice. Base... ver más
Revista: Agronomy

 
Lihong Wang, Tianxiao Li, Hui Liu, Zuowei Zhang, Aizheng Yang and Hongyu Li    
Global climate warming and increased climate variability may increase the number of annual freeze?thaw cycles (FTCs) in temperate zones. The occurrence of more frequent FTCs is predicted to influence soil carbon and nitrogen cycles and increase nitrogen ... ver más
Revista: Agronomy