Abstract
Poor soil structure remains a major restriction to achieving potential yields
from crops under zero tillage. Even water-stable, untrafficked soils in which
plants experience no limitations due to nutrients, water, or drainage almost
inevitably harden within 2–3 months after the initial cultivation. Most
agricultural scientists have not recognised the importance of this common yet
distinct form of soil hardening, which we name coalescence.
We identify coalescence as a slow increase in soil hardness which develops
during cycles of wetting and drying. The structure of a well-prepared bed of
soil that is water-stable and not trafficked changes to one that is hard,
although perforated with biopores. These pores facilitate the infiltration of
water, drainage, and some growth of roots, but the hard matrix causes root
growth and activity to be substantially reduced compared with roots in loose
soil and this reduces the productivity of the crop. We suggest that
coalescence is an important cause of poor responses in productivity to zero
and minimum tillage systems of soil management.
We have found isolated examples of soils in the field that remain soft, loose,
and porous, after more than 2 years since cultivation. This suggests that it
might be possible to prevent coalescence. These coalescence-stable soils, in
common with virgin soils, have properties that enable them to resist
coalescing. Although we do not know what these properties are, high organic
matter (>4% w/w total C content) is closely related to zero
coalescence. We do not understand why we observe low coalescence in some field
situations and we have been unable to control coalescence in the field.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
18 articles.
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