SOIL ORGANIC-MATTER AS INFLUENCED BY CROP ROTATIONS AND FERTILIZATION

被引:184
|
作者
CAMPBELL, CA
ZENTNER, RP
机构
关键词
D O I
10.2136/sssaj1993.03615995005700040026x
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
Few studies conducted in western Canada have assessed how crop rotations and fertilization influence soil organic matter content on land that has been cropped for many years. We monitored soil organic matter in the 0- to 0.15- and 0.15. to 0.3-m depths of a 24-yr crop rotation experiment conducted on a medium-textured Aridic Haploboroll in southwestern Saskatchewan. Prior to the study, the land had been in a hard red spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)-fallow rotation for almost-equal-to 50 yr. Only the 0- to 0.15-m segment showed significant treatment effects. Due to good weather and crop yields in the first 15 yr, soil organic matter had increased under well-fertilized annually cropped rotations, and it remained constant under fallow-containing rotations and under continuous wheat receiving inadequate N fertilizer. Because of several dry years in the regnal 9 yr of the study, all rotations except a well-fertilized, fallow-winter cereal-wheat system lost organic matter. Changes in organic matter were directly related to the amount of crop residues produced by these systems and their ease of eroding. Soil organic matter was inversely related to apparent N deficit (i.e., N exported in grain minus N applied as fertilizer). The fallow-flax (Linum usitatissimum L.)-wheat rotation receiving N and P fertilizer had the lowest soil organic matter, partly due to low production of crop residues by flax, partly to greater leaching of NO3, and partly due to some loss of flax residues blown from the plots. Soil organic matter in the well-fertilized fallow-winter cereal-wheat rotation remained constant because its shorter fallow period reduced soil erosion, and due to its more efficient use of N, as evidenced by minimal leached NO3-N.
引用
收藏
页码:1034 / 1040
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] EFFECT OF CROP ROTATIONS AND FERTILIZATION ON SOIL ORGANIC-MATTER AND SOME BIOCHEMICAL-PROPERTIES OF A THICK BLACK CHERNOZEM
    CAMPBELL, CA
    BOWREN, KE
    SCHNITZER, M
    ZENTNER, RP
    TOWNLEYSMITH, L
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, 1991, 71 (03) : 377 - 387
  • [2] CROP RESIDUE MANAGEMENT TO CONSERVE SOIL ORGANIC-MATTER CONTENT IN SUGARCANE-BASED CROP ROTATIONS
    YADAV, RL
    VERMA, RP
    [J]. BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY, 1995, 51 (2-3) : 241 - 245
  • [3] EFFECT OF CROP ROTATIONS AND ROTATION PHASE ON CHARACTERISTICS OF SOIL ORGANIC-MATTER IN A DARK BROWN CHERNOZEMIC SOIL
    CAMPBELL, CA
    BRANDT, SA
    BIEDERBECK, VO
    ZENTNER, RP
    SCHNITZER, M
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, 1992, 72 (04) : 403 - 416
  • [4] DECOMPOSITION OF CROP RESIDUES AND ORGANIC-MATTER IN THE SOIL
    HARPER, SHT
    JENKINSON, DS
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE, 1987, 40 (02) : 125 - 126
  • [5] Seasonal Changes in Soil Organic Matter and Biomass and Labile Forms of Carbon as Influenced by Crop Rotations
    Ryan, John
    Masri, Samir
    Singh, Murari
    [J]. COMMUNICATIONS IN SOIL SCIENCE AND PLANT ANALYSIS, 2009, 40 (1-6) : 188 - 199
  • [6] MINERALIZATION OF DIFFERENT ORGANIC-MATTER AS INFLUENCED BY SOIL CLASS
    KLIMANEK, EM
    [J]. ARCHIV FUR ACKER UND PFLANZENBAU UND BODENKUNDE-ARCHIVES OF AGRONOMY AND SOIL SCIENCE, 1982, 26 (08): : 523 - 532
  • [7] ORGANIC MANURES AND CROP RESIDUES AS SOIL ORGANIC-MATTER INPUTS
    KUNDLER, P
    [J]. BODENKULTUR, 1986, 37 (04): : 293 - 307
  • [8] Crop rotations and nitrogen fertilization to manage soil organic carbon dynamics
    Studdert, GA
    Echeverría, HE
    [J]. SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 2000, 64 (04) : 1496 - 1503
  • [9] Soil organic matter in crop rotations under no-till
    Raphael, Juan P. A.
    Calonego, Juliano C.
    Milori, Debora Marcondes B. P.
    Rosolem, Ciro A.
    [J]. SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH, 2016, 155 : 45 - 53
  • [10] SOIL ORGANIC-MATTER QUALITY AS INFLUENCED BY TILLAGE, LIME, AND PHOSPHORUS
    SIMARD, RR
    ANGERS, DA
    LAPIERRE, C
    [J]. BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS, 1994, 18 (01) : 13 - 18