7 results

Penetration resistance and soybean yield after mechanical intervention on an oxisol under tillage

Marta Sandra Drescher, Flávio Luiz Foletto Eltz, José Eloir Denardin, Antônio Faganello, Gerson Laerson Drescher

01/Dec/2012

Compaction negatively affects a number of soil properties, e.g., resistance to root penetration and water and nutrient availability to plants, restricting the photosynthetic rate, shoot growth and consequently, the yield. When soil compaction becomes limiting to crop development, mitigation measures must be adopted. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the residual effect of mechanical soil plowing and chiseling, by a seeder with soil breakers (disks and disks plus short ripper) as mitigation practice of the soil compaction under […]

Relationships between yield of Brachiaria Brizantha and physical properties of a savannah oxisol

Maria Cecília Cavallini, Marcelo Andreotti, Letícia Lisbôa Oliveira, Cristiano Magalhães Pariz, Morel de Passos e Carvalho

01/Aug/2010

Crop-livestock integration can affect soil physical properties, altering the yield and plant composition during the various no-tillage crop cycles. The objective of this study was to select the soil properties with the clearest relationship with yield and crude protein content of Brachiaria brizantha. Linear and spatial correlations were analyzed between dry matter yield and crude protein of Brachiaria brizantha and of some physical properties of a Dystroferric Red Latosol (Oxisol), in three layers (0-0.10; 0.10-0.20; 0.20-0.30 m). A geostatistical grid was […]

Chemical and physical attributes in an anfisol cultivated with Panicum maximum Jacq. cv. IPR-86 Milênio, under rotational stocking and fertilized with nitrogen

Patrícia Sarmento, Luis Roberto de Andrade Rodrigues, Mara Cristina Pessôa da Cruz, Simony Marta Bernardo Lugão, Fábio Prudêncio de Campos, José Frederico Centurion, [...]

01/Feb/2008

It is necessary to evaluate the soil physical and chemical attributes in studies that explore grazing systems intensively. In this work the variation in physical and chemical attributes of an Alfissol cultivated with Panicum maximum Jacq. cv. IPR-86 Milênio under grazing were evaluated from October 2001 to May 2002, in the fifth year of consecutive N application at rates of 0, 150, 300, and 450 kg ha-1. After five successive applications of 450 kg ha-1 N, the OM content increased 5 g dm-3, which resulted in […]

Effect of compaction on soybean cultivar yield in haplustox

Amauri Nelson Beutler, José Frederico Centurion, Maria Aparecida Pessoa da Cruz Centurion, Alvaro Pires da Silva

01/Oct/2006

Machinery traffic in modern agriculture is the main cause of soil compaction, and it often affects soybean yields. The objective of this study was to evaluate the development of soybean cultivars in relation to soil compaction levels. An experiment was carried out on a sandy-loam Haplustox located in Jaboticabal County, SP, Brazil. The following compaction levels were tested: T0 = 0 (no tractor passing), T1* = 1, T1 = 1, T2 = 2, T4 = 4 and T6 = tractor […]

Physical soil properties of conventional tillage and no-tillage, in crop rotation and succession, compared with natural pasture

I. Bertol, J. A. Albuquerque, D. Leite, A. J. Amaral, W. A. Zoldan Junior

01/Feb/2004

In soils with naturally favorable characteristics for cultivation, conventional tillage degrades the physical soil properties, since this management system causes the rupture of aggregates, soil compaction, and eliminates soil cover. No-tillage, on the other hand, maintains soil cover and improves physical properties, but consolidates the surface layer. Our study was conducted on a Haplumbrept soil, from May 1995 to April 2001. Five soil tillage treatments were used: conventional tillage crop rotation (CTR), conventional tillage crop succession (CTS), no-tillage crop rotation […]

Characterization of the least limiting water range of an oxisol under no-tillage

C. A. Tormena, A. P. Silva, P. L. Libardi

01/Dec/1998

Soil physical attributes, i. e., soil water potential, soil oxygen, and soil strength, directly affect plant growth. The least limiting water range (LLWR) is the range of soil water content within which plant growth is least limited by water potential, aeration and mechanical resistance and has not been evaluated in tropical soils. The objective of this research was to characterize the LLWR of a Typic Hapludox cropped to corn under no-tillage. Seventy-two undisturbed soil samples were collected at the crop […]

Soil physical properties in no-tillage influenced by liming, previous tillage and traffic

C. A. Tormena, G. Roloff, J. C. M. Sá

01/Jun/1998

In the no-tillage system, the absence of soil revolving, combined with the traffic of machines, promotes excessive soil surface compaction. An experiment was conducted in the county of Ponta Grossa, State of Paraná, Brazil, during the agricultural years of 1989/1990 and 1990/1991, with the objective of studying several factors that intervene in this process. This research compared the effects of three previous soil tillage methods and two liming levels on several physical properties of a clayey Dark Red Latosol under […]