Author:
Francis G. S.,Tabley F. J.,White K. M.
Abstract
Results from the first phase of a long-term experiment showed that, after 6
years under pasture, several soil quality attributes had improved compared
with soil cropped annually. The objectives of this study were to quantify the
effects of pasture-induced increases in structural stability and organic
matter (N fertility) on wheat grown in 3 successive seasons following pasture
cultivation. Growing winter wheat after the ploughing of land that had
previously grown perennial grass resulted in gradual reductions in soil
organic C and total N. Reductions in soil microbial biomass C and earthworm
populations were much more rapid. Soil aggregate stability declined rapidly in
the first year after ploughing, but more slowly after that. Soil macroporosity
increased after ploughing, mainly due to the relief of compaction caused by
sheep treading during grazing. The contrasting soil conditions that existed at
the end of the first experimental phase significantly affected the harvest
yield of the first and second wheat crops, with yields 2—3 t/ha
greater after perennial grasses than after annual crops. Variations in harvest
yield and N uptake were explained by differences in soil N fertility and soil
structural conditions. Treatment effects on yield were not detected in the
third wheat crop. For the structural condition and N fertility of this soil,
the extent of improvement during 3 years under perennial pasture was similar
to the extent of decline under 3 years of cropping. This suggests that similar
lengths of pastoral and arable cropping are needed in crop rotations for the
long-term maintenance of these properties in weakly structured silt loam soils
in New Zealand.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
20 articles.
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