10 results

On-farm evaluation of regenerative land-use practices in a semi-arid pasture agroecosystem in West Texas, USA

Lindsey Slaughter ORCID logo , Sanjit Deb ORCID logo , Somsubhra Chakraborty ORCID logo , Bin Li ORCID logo , Noura Bakr ORCID logo , Bryanna Edwards ORCID logo , [...]

02/Jun/2021

ABSTRACT Continually rising scarcity in water and nutrient resources, especially in semi-arid agricultural systems, combined with increased frequency of extreme weather events such as drought, contribute to a growing need for resilient and regenerative agricultural ecosystems. However, evaluating a myriad of combinations of producer-led sustainable management practices in on-farm research remains challenging. Few studies have elucidated spatial variability in measured soil properties across the study area due to logistical and economic constraints. As such, this study aimed to: 1) establish […]

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SOIL QUALITY IN RELATION TO FOREST CONVERSION TO PERENNIAL OR ANNUAL CROPPING IN SOUTHERN BRAZIL

Elcio Liborio Balota, Ines Fumiko Ubukata Yada, Higo Furlan Amaral, Andre Shigueyoshi Nakatani, Mariangela Hungria, Richard Peter Dick, [...]

01/Jul/2015

Many forested areas have been converted to intensive agricultural use to satisfy food, fiber, and forage production for a growing world population. There is great interest in evaluating forest conversion to cultivated land because this conversion adversely affects several soil properties. We examined soil microbial, physical, and chemical properties in an Oxisol (Latossolo Vermelho distrófico) of southern Brazil 24 years after forest conversion to a perennial crop with coffee or annual grain crops (maize and soybeans) in conventional tillage or […]

Evaluation of soil physical properties in a forage-corn intercropping in succession with soybean in the cerrado region

Veridiana Zocoler de Mendonça, Luiz Malcolm Mano de Mello, Marcelo Andreotti, Francisco Cezar Belchor Lages Pereira, Ronaldo Cintra Lima, Walter Veriano Valério Filho, [...]

01/Feb/2013

The intensive use of Cerrado soils for agricultural production coupled with an inadequate management has resulted in soil degradation. This created the need for the introduction of more sustainable systems such as no-tillage and crop-livestock integration. This study analyzed the effect of succession of corn+forage and soybean on soil physical properties. For this purpose, four forages (Brachiaria brizantha, B. ruziziensis, Panicum maximum cv. Tanzânia, and P. maximum cv. Áries), were sown in an intercropping trial with maize in three modalities […]

Morphology and stability of soil aggregates in a red yellow argisol under different management long-term and secondary atlantic forest

Clério Hickmann, Liovando Marciano da Costa, Carlos Ernesto G.R Schaefer, Raphael Bragança Alves Fernandes

01/Dec/2011

Long-term experiments testing different soil managements provide valuable information in the comparison of alterations in physical, chemical and biological soil properties with soil under natural vegetation. This long-term study was carried out to evaluate the external morphology and the stability of aggregates in the surface layer of a Yellowish-Red Argisol under different managements for comparison with secondary Atlantic Forest. Disturbed and undisturbed soil samples were collected from the 0-5 cm layer from soil under no-tillage (PD) and disk plow + […]

Soil water retention and s index after crop rotation and chiseling

Juliano Carlos Calonego, Ciro Antonio Rosolem

01/Dec/2011

Soil compaction can be minimized either mechanically or biologically, using plant species with vigorous root systems. An experiment was carried out with soybean (Glycine max) in rotation with triticale (X Triticosecale) and sunflower (Helianthus annuus) in fall-winter associated with pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum), grain sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) or sunn hemp (Crotalaria juncea) in spring. Crop rotation under no-till was compared with mechanical chiseling. The experiment was carried out in Botucatu, São Paulo State, Brazil. Soil quality was estimated using the […]

Physical properties of yellow argisol in the semi arid region of northeastern brazil under tillage systems

Jorge Wilson Cortez, Aline Dantas da Silva Alves, Marcelo Rubens Dias de Moura, Nelci Olszevski, Hideo de Jesus Nagahama

01/Aug/2011

Tillage systems should create adequate conditions for plant development. The objective of this study was to evaluate the density, porosity and penetration resistance of a Yellow Ultisol in the semi-arid region of northeastern Brazil after tilling with four agricultural implements (chisel, tandem disc harrow, offset disc harrow with 0.56 m discs, offset disc harrow with 0.61 m discs) in one, two and three operations, using an area without tillage as control. Data of soil bulk density and porosity were analyzed […]

Greenhouse gas emission caused by different land-uses in brazilian Savannah

Marcos Siqueira Neto, Marisa de Cássia Piccolo, Ciniro Costa Junior, Carlos Clemente Cerri, Martial Bernoux

01/Feb/2011

The conversion of native forests by cutting and burning into farming areas leads to alterations in the dynamics of soil organic matter, with changes in emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs: CO2, CH4 and N2O) from the biosphere to the atmosphere. These cause an average temperature rise and, consequently, global climate change. The aim of this study was to examine relationships between the fluxes of CO2, CH4 and N2O with moisture, microbial biomass and inorganic N forms in soil with different […]

Spatial variability of chemical attributes of a soil under different uses and managements

Eloiza Gomes Silva Cavalcante, Marlene Cristina Alves, Zigomar Menezes de Souza, Gener Tadeu Pereira

01/Dec/2007

The use and management of soil and crop condition the variability of soil attributes directly. This study was conducted in Selvíria-MS, Brazil with the objective of evaluating the spatial variability of pH, potassium (K), calcium (Ca), magnesium (Mg) and base saturation (% BS) in an Oxisol under different use and management conditions. Soil samples were collected in a grid, in regular 2 m intervals, at 64 grid points, at depths of 0.0-0.1 m and 0.1-0.2 m, from areas of: native cerrado vegetation (savannah), […]

Influence of tillage systems on the chemical and physical attributes of a soil

R. M. Falleiro, C. M. Souza, C. S. W. Silva, C. S. Sediyama, A. A. Silva, J. L. Fagundes

01/Dec/2003

Different tillage systems cause changes in the chemical, physical and biological attributes of a soil, requiring modifications in the requirements of fertilization and liming. The aim of this work was to evaluate the effects of tillage systems on chemical and physical attributes of a soil, in a long-term experiment installed in 1985. Since then, the soil has been cultivated with annual cultures and submitted to six tillage systems: no-tillage (SD), disc plow (AD), moldboard plow (AA), heavy disc harrow (GP), […]

Carbon and nitrogen storage and organic fraction distribution of a cerrado oxisol under diferent cultivation systems

A. A. Freixo, P. L. O. A. Machado, C. M. Guimarães, C. A. Silva, F. S. Fadigas

01/Jun/2002

This study was carried out to evaluate the effect of cultivation systems on soil carbon and nitrogen contents and on the distribution of light and heavy fractions of soil organic matter (SOM). Density and particle-size fractionations were used to isolate free light fraction (FLF), intra-aggregate light fraction (ILF) and heavy fractions (HF) of a Red-Yellow Latosol from a field experiment at Embrapa Rice and Beans in Goiás, Brazil. Treatments consisted of a combination of soil tillage and crop rotation. Soil […]