4.7 Article

Short-term conservation agriculture and biomass-C input impacts on soil C dynamics in a savanna ecosystem in Cambodia

期刊

AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT
卷 214, 期 -, 页码 54-67

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agee.2015.08.013

关键词

Land use change; No-till cropping systems; Biomass diversity; Soil C sequestration

资金

  1. Programme d'Actions Multi-Pays en Agro-ecologie (PAMPA, French Agency for Development, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and French Global Environment Funds)
  2. United States Agency for International Development Feed the Future Innovation Lab on Sustainable Agriculture
  3. Natural Resource Management Innovation Lab (USAID-FTF-SANREM)
  4. Conservation Agriculture Network in South-East Asia (CANSEA)

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Conservation agriculture (CA) is an effective tool that is used to increase soil C sequestration and enhance soil quality and agronomic productivity. However, rigorous empirical evidence from Southeast Asia, particularly in the Cambodian agro-ecosystem, is still scarce. We hypothesized that high and diversified biomass-C inputs in CA might be the first step toward to increase SOC in the topsoil by creating the C flow to support C storage overtime. Thus, the aim of this study was to quantify the short-term (i.e., five year) impacts of soil management and cropping systems on soil organic C (SOC), soil total N (STN), particulate organic C (POC) and mineral-associated organic C (MAOC). There were three distinct experiments comprised of a combination of cover and main crops including rice-, soybean- and cassava-based cropping systems, hereafter designated as RcCS, SbCS and CsCS, respectively. The experimental plots were laid out in a randomized complete block design with three replicates. Soil management treatments included conventional tillage (CT) and no-till (NT) and a selected adjacent area of reference vegetation (RV). Soil sampling was conducted in 2011 and 2013 at seven depths (0-5, 5-10, 10-20, 20-40, 40-60, 6080 and 80-100 cm). Soil management and crop sequences significantly affected SOC and STN stocks in all three cropping systems. On average, NT SOC stocks at 0-5 cm depth was greater than those of CT by 10%, 20% and 18% and STN stocks by 8%, 25% and 16% for RcCS, SbCS and CsCS, respectively. SOC levels followed the order RV > NT > CT. SOC stocks in the subsoil layers were consistently lower in NT than in CT in all three cropping systems. POC stocks at 0-5 cm depth in NT were on average 22%, 20% and 78% greater than those in CT in RcCS, SbCS and CsCS, respectively. However, significant differences were detected only in RcCS and CsCS. The major POC stocks were found at 0-20 cm depth. NT treatments in SbCS stored 9% greater MAOC stocks at 0-5 cm depth than those in CT, and an increasing trend of NT was observed in RcCS and CsCS. In all three cropping systems, NT systems with diversified crop species significantly increased SOC stocks ranging by 6 to 28% and POC stocks by 56-127% in the surface soils and tended to restore SOC and POC in the subsoil layers after five years. The results leads to accept the hypothesis that short-term CA associated with high biomass-C inputs (particularly bi-annual rotations) promotes SOC recovery in the topsoil layer and creates a potential to increase SOC in the subsoil layers when deeprooting cover crops are included in crop rotations. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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