Author:
Blair Nelly,Crocker G. J.
Abstract
The effect of using different crop rotations, including legumes and fallows,
on soil structural stability, unsaturated hydraulic conductivity, and the
concentration of different carbon fractions was examined in a long-term
rotation trial established in 1966 on a Black Earth (Pellic Vertisol) and a
Red Clay (Chromic Vertisol) soil. There was a large decrease in the
concentration of soil carbon fractions following cropping and cultivation on
both soils. The inclusion of some legume rotation crops resulted in an
increase in labile carbon concentrations compared with continuous wheat or a
long fallow treatment. Aggregate stability to wetting under both immersion and
tension wetting was reduced as a result of cropping and cultivation for both
soil types. However, there was an improvement in aggregate stability with
immersion wetting, on the Red Clay soil, for the lucerne
(Medicago sativa), clover
(Trifolium subterraneum), and continuous wheat
(Triticum aestivium) treatments compared with the long
fallow. Similar results were found for the Black Earth soil; however, on this
soil the medic (Medicago scutella) rotation also showed
an improvement in soil structure. On the Red Clay soil there was a decrease in
hydraulic conductivity (K) with cropping, at all tensions measured. K for the
Black Earth soil was higher at 30 and 40 mm tension on the cropped soil than
on the uncropped reference soil, but at 10 mm tension the reference soil had a
higher K value than all rotations except the lucerne. There was a significant
correlation between labile carbon and all determinations of aggregate
stability for the Red Clay soil. Farmers should be encouraged to eliminate
long fallowing and to adopt no-till techniques combined with the return of
residues from either the primary crop or rotation crops which have a slower
breakdown rate, as this management is likely to have a better potential for
increasing soil carbon content and improving soil structure. The investigation
of ways to better increase the quantity and quality of soil organic matter and
hence soil chemical and physical fertility is necessary if long-term
sustainable agriculture is to be possible.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)