Abstract
Summary. Permanent raised beds coupled with reduced
tillage and cover crops are part of the Australian processing tomato
industry’s strategy to move towards more sustainable farming practices.
As a consequence, crops may be planted into denser soils. Previous work showed
that processing tomatoes had considerable tolerance to no-tillage; mild soil
compaction reduced vegetative growth but not fruit yield. This field study
showed that severe compaction not only reduced vegetative growth, but also
extended the duration of the exponential vegetative growth period, so that
fruit and vegetative growth were competing for assimilates. Under these
conditions, fruit yield was severely reduced. Accurate management of drip
irrigation could not compensate for the narrow, non-limiting water range of a
compacted soil. Mild water deficits during the late flowering and early fruit
growth phase also reduced fruit yield. Pot experiments under controlled
conditions revealed an interaction between soil fumigation and tillage
management. Soil fumigation improved shoot growth at high and low soil
densities with the greatest effects observed below ground; root length was
more than doubled when soil cores with a bulk density of 1.79
t/m3 were fumigated. A cover crop of subterranean
clover, grown in the off-season winter period, had no effect on fruit yield
under non-compacted conditions. The implication is that cover crops, which
have been shown to ameliorate adverse soil physical conditions, can only
express their potential when soil conditions in a conventionally managed
system are suboptimal.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
4 articles.
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