Affiliation:
1. Department of Agroecosystems and Soil Sciences, Agriculture Academy, Vytautas Magnus University, Studentu Str. 11, Kaunas District, LT-53362 Akademija, Lithuania
Abstract
As the population grows, more food is needed to keep the food supply chain running smoothly. For many years, intensive farming systems have been used to meet this need. Currently, due to intense climate change and other global natural problems, there is a shift towards sustainable use of natural resources and simplified methods of tillage. Soil tillage intensity influences the distribution of nutrients, and soil’s physical and mechanical properties, as well as gas flows. The impact of reduced tillage on these indices in spring barley cultivation is still insufficient and requires more analysis on a global scale. This study was carried out at Vytautas Magnus University, Agriculture Academy (Lithuania) in 2022–2023. The aim of the investigation was to determine the effect of the tillage systems on the soil temperature, moisture content, CO2 respiration and concentration in spring barley cultivation. Based on a long-term tillage experiment, five tillage systems were tested: deep and shallow moldboard ploughing, deep cultivation-chiseling, shallow cultivation-chiseling, and no tillage Shallow plowing technology has been found to better conserve soil moisture and maintain higher temperatures in most cases. During almost the entire study period, the spring barley crop with deep cultivation had lower moisture content and lower soil temperature. Shallow cultivation fields in most cases increased CO2 emissions and CO2 concentration. When applying direct sowing to the uncultivated soil (10–20 cm), the concentration of CO2 decreased from 0.01 to 0.148 percent. pcs. The results show that in direct sowing fields, most cases had a positive effect on crop density. Direct sowing fields resulted in significantly lower, from 7.9 to 26.5%, grain yields of spring barley in the years studied.
Reference49 articles.
1. Sustainable tillage: Results from long-term field experiments on Cambisol;Feiza;Zemdirb. Agric.,2010
2. Verstuvinio ir nevertuvinio pagrindinio žemės dirbimo poveikis glėjiškų rudžemių savybėms ir agrosistemų energetiniam efektyvumui;Žemdirbystė,2007
3. The peculiarities of underground and overground parts of Triticum aestivum winter varieties ‘Širvinta 1’ and ‘Zentos’ under the conditions of different soil tillage;Žemdirbystė,2002
4. Experimental analysis of CO2 emissions from agricultural soils subjected to five different tillage systems in Lithuania;Romaneckas;Sci. Total Environ.,2015
5. Steponavičienė, V., Bogužas, V., Sinkevičienė, A., Skinulienė, L., Vaisvalavičius, R., and Sinkevičius, A. (2022). Soil Water Capacity, Pore Size Distribution, and CO2 Emission in Different Soil Tillage Systems and Straw Retention. Plants, 11.