3 results

Long-term wheat-soybean successions affecting the cover and soil management factor in USLE, under subtropical climate

Tiago Stumpf da Silva ORCID logo , Elemar Antonino Cassol ORCID logo , Renato Levien ORCID logo , Flávio Luiz Foletto Eltz ORCID logo , Marcelo Raul Schmidt ORCID logo

07/Aug/2020

ABSTRACT Vegetation cover and soil management influence the magnitude of soil losses. In the Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE), cover and management are represented by the C factor, as it is the easiest factor to manage to reduce loss of soil and water in agricultural areas. This study aimed to determine the C factor of a succession of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) followed by soybean (Glycine max) under conventional tillage, reduced tillage, and no-tillage. For this, data of soil losses […]

Visual Abstract

Water erosion in no-tillage monoculture and intercropped systems along contour lines

Ildegardis Bertol, Roger Robert Ramos, Fabrício Tondello Barbosa, Antonio Paz González, Julio César Ramos, Douglas Henrique Bandeira

01/Apr/2013

Water erosion is the major cause of soil and water losses and the main factor of degradation of agricultural areas. The objective of this work was to quantify pluvial water erosion from an untilled soil with crop rows along the contour, in 2009 and 2010, on a Humic Dystrupept, with the following treatments: a) maize monoculture; b) soybean monoculture; c) common bean monoculture; d) intercropped maize and bean, exposed to four simulated rainfall tests of on hour at controlled intensity […]

Phosphorus and potassium losses by water erosion in an inceptisol under natural rainfall

I. Bertol, J. C. Guadagnin, P. C. Cassol, A. J. Amaral, F. T. Barbosa

01/Jun/2004

Inadequate soil management systems can lead to water erosion, nutrient losses and superficial water pollution, accelerating environmental degradation. The P and K losses caused by water erosion were evaluated from November 1999 to October 2001 in an Inceptisol with 0.102 m m-1 slope, in Lages, Santa Catarina State, Brazil, under natural rainfall conditions. The evaluated soil management systems were: no-tillage for six years (NT6), no-tillage for nine years (NT9), chiseling plus one disking for nine years (C + D9), and […]