4.2 Article

Effect of conservation tillage on yield of spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and soil mineral nitrogen and carbon content

Journal

INTERNATIONAL AGROPHYSICS
Volume 35, Issue 1, Pages 83-95

Publisher

POLISH ACAD SCIENCES, INST AGROPHYSICS
DOI: 10.31545/intagr/132363

Keywords

agronomic traits; conservation agriculture; soil mineral nitrogen; no-till; C dynamics

Categories

Funding

  1. financial special project of Gansu Province [GSCZZ-20160909]
  2. Key Talents Project of Gansu Province V [LRYCZ-2020-1]
  3. Key Research and Development program of Gansu Province, China (2016-2021) [20YF8NA135]

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Conservation farming practices, including minimal soil disturbance and straw return, significantly benefit crop agronomic attributes and soil nutrient accumulation. A four-year study showed that conservation tillage practices led to increased yield and improved soil fertility parameters compared to conventional tillage.
Conservation farming practices using the least soil disturbance and straw-return benefits the crop agronomic attributes and soil nutrient accumulation. The four-year (2016-2019) research was conducted under randomized complete blocks design to explore the agronomic benefit of conservation tillage practices on wheat yield performance and on soil fertility parameters. The two straw treatments consisted of wheat straw-return to the notilled soil and straw incorporation into the conventionally tilled soil. The two tillage treatments were the no-tillage and conventional tillage control. These conservative tillage treatments were compared with the conventional tillage control. In comparison with conventional tillage, the conservation management practices of no-tilled soil, conventionally tilled soil, and no-tillage notably increased the yield by an average of 33, 26, and 18% respectively. Moreover, conservative tillage practices improved the soil nitrate-nitrogen, ammonium nitrogen and carbon contents in the 0-30 cm soil layer by 12, 9, and 15% respectively over conventional tillage, averaged across conventionally tilled soil, no-tilled soil, and no-tillage. The overall distribution of soil nitrate-nitrogen, ammonium nitrogen, and carbon in the 0-30 cm soil layer with regard to conventionally tilled, no-tilled soil, and no-tillage was greater than conventional tillage, based on Principal Component Analysis. We concluded that conservation tillage practices could replace conventionally tilled practice with respect to productivity, soil mineral nitrogen, and carbon accumulation benefits.

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