4.7 Article

Impact of Rice Straw Mulch on Soil Physical Properties, Sunflower Root Distribution and Yield in a Salt-Affected Clay-Textured Soil

Journal

AGRICULTURE-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agriculture11030264

Keywords

crack dimension; soil water content; soil penetration resistance; sunflower yield

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Center for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) [LWR/2014/073]

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The study showed that ameliorating soil constraints through mulch application can promote sunflower root growth in the upper soil layer, resulting in increased yield in clay soil.
Puddling of clay soils for rice transplanting causes a loss of soil structure and vertical shrinkage cracks that are hypothesized to hamper sunflower root growth in the following dry season. To alleviate soil constraints for sunflower root growth and yield, we examined the effects of three levels of mulch and two irrigation regimes in the dry season on a clay-textured soil in the coastal zone of Bangladesh. These treatments were no-mulch, rice straw mulch at 5 t ha(-1) and 10 t ha(-1), irrigation applied to the field capacity (I1) and a water supply double that of the I1 treatment (I2). The rice straw mulch significantly increased soil water content by 3-9% and decreased soil penetration resistance by 28-77% and crack volume by 84-91% at A 0-30 cm soil depth relative to the no-mulch treatment. The better root development with the rice straw mulch increased sunflower yield by 23%. No benefit or further reduction in soil penetration resistance or yield improvement was obtained from increasing the level of mulch from 5 to 10 t ha(-1) or the volume of irrigation water. It is concluded that ameliorating soil constraints by mulch application led to better root growth in the upper root zone and the increased yield in the clay soil.

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