4.4 Article

Corn-soybean sequence and tillage effects on soil carbon dynamics and storage

Journal

SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL
Volume 71, Issue 1, Pages 145-154

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.2136/sssaj2005.0231

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Soil organic carbon (SOC) in agroecosystems is regulated by crop rotation and soil disturbance. We assessed crop sequence and tillage effects on SOC dynamics and storage using natural C-13 abundance of corn (Zea mays L.) and soybean [Glycine max (L.), Merr.]. Treatments consisted of tillage: moldboard plow (MP), chisel plow (Cl?), and no-tillage (NT); and crop sequence: continuous corn (CC), continuous soybean (SS), and alternating corn-soybean (CS). Soil samples were collected after 14 yr in each treatment and in fallow alley-ways and were analyzed for SOC, delta C-13, bulk density, and pH. Tillage by crop sequence interactions occurred as treatments with MP and SS as well as fallow averaged 135 Mg SOC ha(-1) (0- to 45-cm depth), while CP treatments with corn (CC and CS) and NT with CC averaged 164 Mg SOC ha(-1). Crop sequence effects on SOC (0- to 45-cm depth) occurred when tillage was reduced with CP and NT averaging 15% greater SOC in CC than SS. In addition to less C inputs than CC, SS accelerated rates of SOC decomposition. Tillage effects on SOC were greatest in CC where CP had 26% and NT 20% more SOC than MP, whereas SOC in SS was similar across tillage treatments. Up to 33% of the greater SOC under CC for CP and NT, compared with MP, occurred below tillage operating depths. Substantial losses of SOC were estimated (1.6 Mg SOC ha(-1) yr(-1)) despite lowering SOC decay rates with reduced tillage and high levels of C inputs with CC.

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