Author:
Holford I. C. R.,Schweitzer B. E.,Crocker G. J.
Abstract
The effects of subterranean clover, medic, and lucerne, grown simultaneously
from 1988 to 1990, followed by wheat from 1991 to 1993, and of chickpea and
long fallow in alternate years with wheat, on soil total nitrogen (N),
nitrate-N (NO-3-N), organic carbon
(C), and moisture were measured over 6 years in 2 long-term experiments on a
black earth (pellic vertisol) and red clay (chromic vertisol) in northern New
South Wales.
The accretion of soil total N in the black earth and
NO-3-N in both soils was higher
after lucerne than after other legumes, and
NO-3 in the black earth remained
high after lucerne to the full depth (120 cm) of measurement during the
following 3 years of wheat growing. Clover had the next largest effect on
total N and NO-3 accretion, and
chickpea had the smallest effect except in the red clay where chickpea
increased NO-3 more than medic in
1990. However, none of the annual legumes had much effect on
NO-3 after the first year of
cropping and their small residual effects, if any, were confined to the top 30
cm of soil. Levels of total N accretion after lucerne were higher than
previously measured, because of the greater depth of measurement, but were
similar on a per unit depth basis.
High levels of NO-3 -N after long
fallow, especially in the black earth, which tended to be higher than after
medic or chickpea, were probably caused by accelerated mineralisation of
organic N which has declined more in this rotation than in any other.
There was no accumulation of organic C during the legume growing period in any
rotation, and C tended to be lower after chickpea than after other legumes.
Organic C was almost always lowest in the long fallow treatment.
Summer-growing grasses, which occurred in all treatments to varying degrees,
may have caused the organic C accumulation during the 3 years of cropping.
In the first year of wheat growing, soil water was lower after lucerne than
after other treatments and highest after long fallow, continuous wheat, and
chickpea. It was replenished in the red clay to field capacity in all
treatments by high rainfall during the fallow before the first wheat crop but
not in the black earth, which failed to reach field capacity in any treatment
even 2.5 years after the pasture legume phase.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)