4 results

Modern High-Yielding Maize, Wheat and Soybean Cultivars in Response to Gypsum and Lime Application on No-Till Oxisol

Douglas Dalla Nora, Telmo Jorge Carneiro Amado, Rodrigo da Silveira Nicoloso, Eduardo Müller Gruhn

30/Oct/2017

ABSTRACT Modern maize, wheat, and soybean cultivars are usually characterized by a short cycle, high shoot-root ratio, and high responsiveness to nutrient input. Continuous no-tillage management (NTS) frequently leads to a steep gradient in soil chemical quality with depth, thus decreasing yield under conditions of acid subsoil and water stress. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of gypsum, applied separately or in combination with lime, on the yield of cultivars used in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, […]

Mitigation of the Gradient of Chemical Properties in the Rooting Zone of Dystrophic Oxisols by Gypsum and Lime Inputs under a No-Till System

Douglas Dalla Nora, Telmo Jorge Carneiro Amado, Rodrigo da Silveira Nicoloso, Antonio Cesar Batista Mazuco, Marcieli Piccin

12/Jun/2017

ABSTRACT Improvement of soil chemical properties in dystrophic Oxisols managed under long-term no-tillage system (NTS) with surface broadcast lime has been, frequently, restricted to a shallow topsoil layer. As a consequence, a sharply-defined chemical quality gradient is created, with deterioration from the surface towards deeper layers in Oxisols in southern Brazil. The aim of this study was to assess the temporal effects of gypsum, applied alone or in combination with lime, on Ca2+ content and Al3+ saturation in the rooting […]

Soil Chemical and Physical Properties on an Inceptisol after Liming (Surface and Incorporated) Associated with Gypsum Application

Delcio Rudinei Bortolanza, Vilson Antonio Klein

17/Jun/2016

ABSTRACT Inceptsoils have high aluminum contents, and amendments are required to ensure a satisfactory crop development. Liming is efficient in neutralizing Al3+, but when applied to the topsoil its action is restricted to the surface layers, and sometimes lime incorporation into the soil is recommendable. However, tillage may negatively alter physical soil properties. Thus, gypsum could be an alternative to increase Ca2+ levels and reduce Al saturation in deeper layers, without requiring tillage. An experiment was initiated in 2010, to […]

Soil chemical properties related to acidity under successive pig slurry applications

Cledimar Rogério Lourenzi, Carlos Alberto Ceretta, Leandro Souza da Silva, Gustavo Trentin, Eduardo Girotto, Felipe Lorensini, [...]

01/Oct/2011

Pig slurry application as soil manure can alter the chemical properties of the soil and affect its acidity, modifying the environment for crop growth and development. The objective of this study was to evaluate the chemical properties related to soil acidity subjected to successive applications of pig slurry. The experiment was conducted in May 2000, in an experimental area of the Federal University of Santa Maria (UFSM) under no-tillage and lasted until January 2008. Nineteen surface applications of 0, 20, […]