Soil profile health in the Palouse soil series: Carbon, nitrogen, nutrients, and aggregates

Author:

Naasko Katherine1ORCID,Pan William2,Reganold John2,Huggins David23,Madsen Isaac2,Sullivan Tarah2,Wills Skye4ORCID,Tao Haiying5

Affiliation:

1. W.K. Kellogg Biological Station Michigan State University Hickory Corners Michigan USA

2. Department of Crop and Soil Sciences Washington State University Pullman Washington USA

3. USDA‐ARS, Washington State University Pullman Washington USA

4. USDA Natural Resource Conservation Service, National Soil Survey Center Lincoln Nebraska USA

5. Department of Plant Science and Landscape Architecture University of Connecticut Storrs Connecticut USA

Abstract

AbstractDeep soil health (>30 cm) supports deep roots in dryland wheat cropping systems. However, few studies examine how tillage and climate impact soil health indicators deeper than 30 cm in dryland wheat systems. We evaluated how select soil chemical (i.e., nutrients and pH), biological (i.e., carbon [C] and nitrogen [N] fractions and ratios), and physical (i.e., mean weight diameter [MWD] of soil aggregates) health indicators were impacted by depth, tillage, and climate. We sampled soil profiles of the Palouse soil series from 0‐ to 85 cm in depth at three no‐till (NT) and three conventional till (CT) sites across a mean annual precipitation (MAP) gradient (460–660 mm) in the Palouse River watershed. NT sites, compared to CT sites, had higher total C (TC) and N (TN), permanganate oxidizable C, hot‐water extractable C and N, and cold‐water extractable N (0–5 cm); greater soil moisture (0–29 cm); larger MWD (0–5 cm; 10–85 cm); but lower soil pH (0–10 cm; 59–85 cm); less TC, TN, and NO3 (29–85 cm); less NH4+ and mineralizable soil C (MINC) (29–59 cm); and lower autoclaved‐citrate extractable (ACE) protein (0–5 cm; 29–85 cm). Sites with higher MAP had greater soil moisture (0–29 cm), higher MINC (0–85 cm), lower CWC (5–10 cm; 29–59 cm), and lower TC and ACE protein (29–85 cm). The variable effects of tillage and climate on these soil health indicators with soil depth show the importance of evaluating soil health in both surface and subsurface soil depths in dryland wheat cropping systems.

Funder

Natural Resources Conservation Service

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Soil Science,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

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