4.7 Article

Enhanced soil water recovery and crop yield following conversion of 9-year-old leguminous pastures into croplands

Journal

AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT
Volume 279, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agwat.2023.108189

Keywords

Legume pasture; Crop rotation; Soil water; Yield increase; Sustainable agriculture

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Pasture-crop rotation is an effective agronomical practice that improves soil and water conservation, livestock production, and food security. A field experiment in China's Loess Plateau found that converting long-term leguminous pastures into croplands resolved soil desiccation concerns and improved wheat yields and water use efficiency. The results suggest that legume pasture-crop rotation facilitates sustainable rainfed farming development.
Pasture-crop rotation has been considered as an efficient agronomical practice to improve soil and water con-servation, develop livestock production, and promote food security. However, the characteristics of soil water restoration and performances of crop yield and water use efficiency (WUE) after conversion of long-term legu-minous pasture into croplands still remain unclear. A field experiment was conducted in China's Loess Plateau to investigate soil water restoration and wheat yields in crop rotation with Italian ryegrass (Festuca perennis Lam.) and winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) converted from three 9-year-old leguminous pastures, viz. milk vetch (Astragalus adsurgens Pall.), alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) and bush clover (Lespedeza davurica S.), and unplanted control (fallow). Soil water in the alfalfa treatment gradually recovered from up to down compared to the fallow treatment (control) during cultivation phase. After one year of rotation, the recovery levels of soil water in the three pasture-crop rotation systems at 0-500 cm soil depth were 97.1%, 95.5% and 94.2%, respectively, compared to the fallow treatment. The legume treatments significantly enhanced the crop yield (35.6%-64.5%), aboveground biomass (28.7%-59.4%) and WUE (60%-68.3%) of winter wheat compared with fallow. These results imply that the concerns about soil desiccation from long-term alfalfa was resolvable after long-term alfalfa converted into cropland in the rainfed farming area of Loess Plateau. The results also suggest that legume pasture-crop rotation can facilitate achieving a sustainable development of rainfed farming.

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