3.9 Article

Soil Health Assessment to Evaluate Conservation Practices in SemiArid Cotton Systems at Producer Site Scale

Journal

SOIL SYSTEMS
Volume 7, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/soilsystems7030072

Keywords

soil health; tillage; cotton; dryland; cover crops; commercial fields enzyme activities

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This study examines the effects of transitioning from tilled cotton systems to no-tillage with winter wheat as a cover crop on soil health in semi-arid regions. The results show that no-till systems can significantly improve soil health, as indicated by various soil health indicators and increased nutrient cycling.
Maintaining soil health and sustainable crop production has been challenged by climate variability and wind erosion in semi-arid regions. To understand the initial effects of the transition of tilled cotton systems to no-tillage with winter wheat as a cover crop, we sampled 18 commercial grower sites from 2019 to 2022 in the Southern High Plains (SHP). We evaluated the soil biological component, which often responds rapidly to changes in residue additions or minimized soil disturbance providing an early indication of changes in soil health, especially in the low organic matter soils in this region. After two years, compared to tilled systems, no-till systems had significant increases in ester-linked fatty acid methyl ester (EL-FAME) bacterial and saprophytic and AMF fungal markers, enzyme activities of nutrient cycling, and various SOM pools, under both center-pivot irrigation and dryland. Similar increases were also observed in two dryland sites sampled before and up to two years after transition to no-till. Our study demonstrates the potential of no-tillage and cover crops to improve soil health in cotton production in semiarid regions, and a framework for a soil health assessment that links different soil health indicators with functions related to soil organic matter, soil water, and biogeochemical cycling.

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