4.0 Article

THE EFFECT OF COVER CROPS ON SOIL MOISTURE IN PLOUGHLESS AND TRADITIONAL TILLAGE IN THE CULTIVATION OF CARROT

Journal

ACTA SCIENTIARUM POLONORUM-HORTORUM CULTUS
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages 11-20

Publisher

UNIV LIFE SCIENCES LUBLIN
DOI: 10.24326/asphc.2022.1.2

Keywords

catch crops; Secale; Avena; Fagopyrum; Helianthus; Phacelia; Daucus

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of Poland [N N310 210837 210837]

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Given the increasing drought and water shortage in recent years, it is crucial to study soil water retention and increasing soil humidity. This study investigated the impact of different cover crop species and the method and date of incorporating their biomass into the soil on soil moisture in ploughless carrot cultivation. The results showed that cover crops significantly increased soil moisture, with spring rye cover crop having the most favorable effect.
In a view of the predicted drought that has appeared in recent years and water shortage in the growing season, which is getting worse every year, the problem of water retention in the soil and increasing its humidity be-comes of exceptional importance. The field experiment was carried out in 2009-2012 on grey brown podzolic soil developed from loess formations covering the cretaceous marls with a granulometric composition cor-responding to medium dusty loam. The aim of the study was to assess the impact of various species of cover crops and the method and date of mixing their biomass with the soil on the soil moisture in ploughless carrot cultivation. The experimental design included seven cover crop species (spring rye, common oat, common vetch, white mustard, lacy phacelia, buckwheat, fodder sunflower) and six kinds of soil tillage. The effect of cover crops and tillage on soil moisture was modified by the course of the weather and varied depending on the year of research, sampling date and soil layer. In spring, the highest layer of soil (0-20 cm) not culti-vated before winter (NTz) accumulated the most water, and the least after pre-winter ploughing (Oz). In the 0-40 cm layer, the lowest humidity was in the soil ploughed before winter (Oz), and the highest after no-till (NTz) and after subsoiling before winter (GLz). The ridge cultivation performed in the spring caused the soil to dry out. In the remaining variants of no-ploughing tillage, soil moisture in the 0-40 cm layer was similar to that of conventional cultivation. Cover crops exerted a significant influence on the soil moisture in carrot cultivation at all test dates, increasing its moisture content compared to cultivation without cover crops. The rye cover crop had particularly favourable effect on the soil moisture.

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