Conservation agriculture, increased organic carbon in the top-soil macro-aggregates and reduced soil CO2 emissions
- 1k Downloads
- 18 Citations
Abstract
Background and aims
Conservation agriculture, the combination of minimal soil movement (zero or reduced tillage), crop residue retention and crop rotation, might have the potential to increase soil organic C content and reduce emissions of CO2.
Methods
Three management factors were analyzed: (1) tillage (zero tillage (ZT) or conventional tillage (CT)), (2) crop rotation (wheat monoculture (W), maize monoculture (M) and maize-wheat rotation (R)), and (3) residue management (with (+r), or without (−r) crop residues). Samples were taken from the 0–5 and 5–10 cm soil layers and separated in micro-aggregates (< 0.25 mm), small macro-aggregates (0.25 to 1 mm) and large macro-aggregates (1 to 8 mm). The carbon content of each aggregate fraction was determined.
Results
Zero tillage combined with crop rotation and crop residues retention resulted in a higher proportion of macro-aggregates. In the 0–5 cm layer, plots with a crop rotation and monoculture of maize and wheat in ZT+r had the greatest proportion of large stable macro-aggregates (40%) and highest mean weighted diameter (MWD) (1.7 mm). The plots with CT had the largest proportion of micro-aggregates (27%). In the 5–10 cm layer, plots with residue retention in both CT and ZT (maize 1 mm and wheat 1.5 mm) or with monoculture of wheat in plots under ZT without residues (1.4 mm) had the greatest MWD. The 0–10 cm soil layer had a greater proportion of small macroaggregates compared to large macro-aggregates and micro-aggregates. In the 0–10 cm layer of soil with residues retention and maize or wheat, the greatest C content was found in the small and large macro-aggregates. The small macro-aggregates contributed most C to the organic C of the sample. For soil cultivated with maize, the CT treatments had significantly higher CO2 emissions than the ZT treatments. For soil cultivated with wheat, CTR-r had significantly higher CO2 emissions than all other treatments.
Conclusion
Reduction in soil disturbance combined with residue retention increased the C retained in the small and large macro-aggregates of the top soil due to greater aggregate stability and reduced the emissions of CO2 compared with conventional tillage without residues retention and maize monoculture (a cultivation system normally used in the central highlands of Mexico).
Keywords
Aggregate stability Soil CO2 emissions Zero tillageNotes
Acknowledgments
Mariela Fuentes received a PhD fellowship from CONACYT. Fieldwork was done in a long-term trial established by Dr. R.A. Fisher at CIMMYT’s El Batán research station. The research was supported by CIMMYT and its strategic donors and forms part of the strategic research network developed in the frame of MasAgro (Modernización sustentable de la agricultura tradicional), component ‘Desarrollo sustentable con el productor’. The authors thank M. Martinez, A. Martinez, and H. González-Juárez for help with the field work.
References
- Allmaras RR, Linden DR, Clapp CE (2004) Corn-residue transformations into root and soil carbon as related to nitrogen, tillage, and stover management. Soil Sci Soc Am J 68:1366–1375CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Angers DA, Recous S, Aita C (1997) Fate of carbon and nitrogen water-stable aggregates during composition of 13 C 15N-labelled wheat straw in situ. Eur J Soil Sci 48:295–300CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Balesdent J, Chenu C, Balabane M (2000) Relationship of soil organic matter dynamics to physical protection and tillage. Soil Till Res 53:215–230CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Ball B, Scott A, Parker JP (1999) Field N2O, CO2 and CH4 fluxes in relation to tillage, compaction and soil quality in Scotland. Soil Till Res 53:29–39CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Barthès B, Azontonde A, Boli BZ, Prat C, Roose E (2000) Field-scale run-off and erosion in relation to topsoil aggregate stability in three tropical regions (Benin, Cameroon, Mexico). Eur J Soil Sci 51:485–495CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Bayer C, Mielniczuk J, Amado TJC, Martin-Neto L, Fernandes SV (2000) Organic matter storage in a sandy clay loam Acrisol affected by tillage and cropping systems in southern Brazil. Soil Till Res 54:101–109CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Black AL, Tanaka DL (1997) A conservation tillage-cropping study in the Northern Great Plains of the United States. In: Paul EA, Paustian K, Elliot ET, Cole CV (eds) Soil organic matter in temperate agroecosystems long-term experiments in North America. CRC, New York, pp 335–342Google Scholar
- Blanco-Canqui H, Lal R (2007) Soil structure and organic carbon relationships following 10 years of wheat straw management in no-till. Soil Till Res 95:240–254CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Blanco-Canqui H, Lal R (2008) No-tillage and soil-profile carbon sequestration: An on farm assessment. Soil Sci Soc Am J 72:693–701CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Bronick CJ, Lal R (2005) Soil structure and management: a review. Geoderma 124:3–22CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Chatskikh D, Olesen JE, Hansen EM, Elsgaard L, Petersen BM (2008) Effects of reduced tillage on net greenhouse gas fluxes from loamy sand soil under winter crops in Denmark. Agr Ecosyst Environ 128:117–126CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Denef K, Six J, Bossuyt H, Frey SD, Elliott ET, Merckx R, Paustian K (2001a) Influence of dry-wet cycles on the interrelationship between aggregate, particulate organic matter, and microbial community dynamics. Soil Biol Biochem 33:1599–1611CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Denef K, Six J, Paustian K, Merckx R (2001b) Importance of macroaggregate dynamics in controlling soil carbon stabilization: short-term effects of physical disturbance induced by dry-wet cycles. Soil Biol Biochem 33:2145–2153CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Denef K, Six J, Merckx R, Paustian K (2004) Carbon sequestration in microaggregates of no-tillage soils with different clay mineralogy. Soil Sci Soc Am J 68:1935–1944Google Scholar
- Denef K, Zotarellia L, Boddey RM, Six J (2007) Microaggregate-associated carbon as a diagnostic fraction for management-induced changes in soil organic carbon in two Oxisols. Soil Biol Biochem 39:1165–1172CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Diekow J, Mielniczuk J, Knicker H, Bayer C, Dick DP, Kogel-Knabner I (2005) Soil C and N stocks as affected by cropping systems and nitrogen fertilization in a southern Brazil Acrisol managed under no-tillage for 17 years. Soil Till Res 81:87–95CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Dolan MS, Clapp CE, Allmaras RR, Baker JM, Molina JA (2006) Soil organic carbon and nitrogen in a Minnesota soil as related to tillage, residue and nitrogen management. Soil Till Res 89:221–231CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Elder JW, Lal R (2008) Tillage effects on gaseous emissions from an intensively farmed organic soil in North Central Ohio. Soil Till Res 98:45–55CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Elliott ET (1986) Aggregate structure and carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus in native and cultivated soils. SSSAJ 50:627–633Google Scholar
- Eynard A, Schumacher TE, Lindstrom MJ, Malo DD, Kohl RA (2006) Effects of aggregate structure and organic C on wettability of Ustolls. Soil Till Res 88:205–216CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Franzluebbers AJ, Hons FM, Zuberer DA (1995) Tillage and crop effects on seasonal dynamics of soil CO2 evolution, water content, temperature, and bulk density. Appl Soil Ecol 2:95–109CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Fuentes M, Govaerts B, De León F, Hidalgo C, Sayre KD, Etchevers J, Dendooven L (2009) Fourteen years of applying zero and conventional tillage, crop rotation and residue management systems and its effect on physical and chemical soil quality. Eur J Agron 30:228–237CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Fuentes M, Govaerts B, Hidalgo C, Etchevers J, Gónzalez-Martín I, Hernández-Hierro JM, Sayre KD, Dendooven L (2010) Organic carbon and stable 13 C isotope in conservation agriculture and conventional systems. Soil Biol Biochem 42:551–557CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Gale WJ, Cambardella CA, Bailey TB (2000) Root-derived carbon and the formation and stabilization of aggregates. Soil Sci Soc Am J 64:201–207CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Govaerts B, Sayre KD, Deckers J (2005) Stable high yields with zero tillage and permanent bed planting? Field Crops Res 94:33–42CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Govaerts B, Sayre K, Deckers J (2006) A minimum data set for soil quality assessment of wheat and maize cropping in the highlands of Mexico. Soil Till Res 87:163–174CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Govaerts B, Verhulst N, Castellanos-Navarrete A, Sayre KD, Dixon J, Dendooven L (2009a) Conservation agriculture and soil carbon sequestration; between myth and farmer reality. Crit Rev Plant Sci 28:97–122CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Govaerts B, Sayre KD, Goudeseune B, De Corte P, Lichter K, Dendooven L, Deckers J (2009b) Conservation agriculture as a sustainable option for the central Mexican highlands. Soil Till Res 103:222–230CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Gregory PJ (2006) Roots, rhizosphere and soil: the route to a better understanding of soil science? Eur J Soil Sci 57:2–12CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Halvorson AD, Wienhold BJ, Black AL (2002) Tillage, nitrogen, and cropping systems effects on soil carbon sequestration. Soil Sci Soc Am J 66:906–912CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Hendrix PF, Han CR, Groffman PM (1988) Soil respiration in conventional and no-tillage agroecosystems under different winter cover crop rotations. Soil Till Res 12:135–148CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Huggins DR, Allmaras RR, Clapp CE, Lamb JA, Randall GW (2007) Corn soybean sequence and tillage effects on soil carbon dynamics and storage. Soil Sci Soc Am J 71:255–258CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Hutchinson JJ, Campbell CA, Desjardins RL (2007) Some perspectives on carbon sequestration in agriculture. Agric Meteorol 142:288–302CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Institute SAS (1994) SAS user’s guide. SAS Inst, CaryGoogle Scholar
- Jantalia CP, Resck DVS, Alves BJR, Zotarelli L, Urquiaga S, Boddey RM (2007) Tillage effect on C stocks of a clayey Oxisol under a soybean-based crop rotation in the Brazilian Cerrado region. Soil Till Res 95:97–109CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Kemper W, Rosenau R (1986) Aggregate stability and size distribution. In: Klute A, Campbell G, Jackson R, Mortland M, Nielsen D (eds) Methods of soil analysis. Part I. ASA and SSSA, Madison, pp 425–442Google Scholar
- Le Bissonnais Y (1996) Aggregates stability and assessment of soil crustability and erodibility: I. Theory and methodology. Eur J Soil Sci 47:425–437CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Lee J, Hopmans JW, van Kessel C, King A, Evatt KJ, Louie D, Rolston D, Six J (2009) Tillage and seasonal emissions of CO2, N2O and NO across a seed bed and at the field scale in a Mediterranean climate. Agric Ecosyst Environ 129:378–390CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Lichter K, Govaerts B, Six J, Sayre KD, Deckers J, Dendooven L (2008) Aggregation and C and N contents of soil organic matter fractions in the permanent raised-bed planting system in the Highlands of Central Mexico. Plant Soil 305:237–252CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Limón-Ortega A, Sayre K, Drijber R, Francis C (2002) Soil attributes in a furrow-irrigated bed planting system in northwest México. Soil Till Res 63:123–132CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Malhi SS, Lemke R (2007) Tillage, crop residue and N fertilizer effects on crop yield, nutrient uptake, soil quality and nitrous oxide gas emissions in a second 4-yr rotation cycle. Soil Till Res 96:269–283CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Mohanty M, Painuli DK, Misra AK, Ghosh PK (2007) Soil quality effects of tillage and residue under rice–wheat cropping on a Vertisol in India. Soil Till Res 92:243–250CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Nouchi I, Yonemura S (2008) CO2, CH4 and N2O fluxes from soybean and barley double cropping in relation to tillage in Japan. Phyton-Ann Rei Bot 45:327–338Google Scholar
- Oades JM (1984) Soil organic matter and structural stability: mechanisms and implications for management. Plant Soil 76:319–337CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Oorts K, Merchkx R, Gréhan E, Lebreuche J, Nicolardot B (2007) Determinants of annual fluxes of CO2 and N2O in long-term no-tillage and conventional tillage systems in northern France. Soil Till Res 95:133–148CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Osozawa S, Hasegawa S (1995) Daily and seasonal changes in soil carbon dioxide concentration and flux in Andisol. Soil Sci 160:117–124Google Scholar
- Rasmussen PE, Smiley RW (1997) Soil carbon and nitrogen change in log-term agricultural experiments at Pendleton, Oregon. In: Paul EA, Paustian K, Elliot ET, Cole CV (eds) Soil organic matter in temperate agroecosystems long-term experiments in North America. CRC, New York, pp 353–360Google Scholar
- Schlesinger WH (1999) Carbon sequestration in soils. Science 248:2095CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Shaver TM, Peterson GA, Ahuja LR, Westfall DG, Sherrod LA, Dunn G (2002) Surface soil properties after twelve years of dryland no-till management. Soil Sci Soc Am J 66:1292–1303CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Shukla MK, Lal R, Ebinger M (2006) Determining soil quality indicators by factor analysis. Soil Till Res 87:194–204CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Six J, Elliott ET, Paustian K, Doran JW (1998) Aggregation and soil organic matter accumulation in cultivated and native grassland soils. Soil Sci Soc Am J 62:1367–1377CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Six J, Elliott ET, Paustian K (1999) Aggregate and soil organic matter dynamics under conventional and no-tillage systems. Soil Sci Soc Am J 63:1350–1358CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Six J, Elliott ET, Paustian K (2000) Soil macroaggregate turnover and microaggregate formation: a mechanism for C sequestration under no-tillage agriculture. Soil Biol Biochem 32:2099–2103CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Six J, Feller C, Denef K, Ogle SM, de Morales Sá JC, Albrecht A (2002) Soil organic matter, biota and aggregation in temperate and tropical soils-effects of no tillage. Agronomie 22:755–775CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Six J, Ogle SM, Breidt F, Conant R, Mosier A, Paustian K (2004a) The potential to mitigate global warming with no-tillage management is only realized when practiced in the long term. Glob Change Biol 10:144–160CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Six J, Bossuyt H, Degryze S, Denef K (2004b) A history of research on the link between (micro)aggregates, soil biota, and soil organic matter dynamics. Soil Till Res 79:7–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Soil Survey Staff (2003) Keys to Soil Taxonomy. United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service. Washington DC, pp 332Google Scholar
- Stewart C, Plante A, Paustian K, Conant R, Six J (2008) Soil Carbon Saturation: Linking concept and measurable carbon pools. SSSAJ 72:379–392Google Scholar
- Tantely M, Razafimbelo AA, Oliver R, Chevallier T, Chapuis-Lardy L, Feller C (2008) Aggregate associated-C and physical protection in a tropical clayey soil under Malagasy conventional and no-tillage systems. Soil Till Res 98:140–149CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Tisdall JM, Oades JM (1982) Organic matter and water-stable aggregates in soils. J Soil Sci 62:141–163Google Scholar
- Ussiri DAN, Lal R (2009) Long-term tillage effects on soil carbon storage and carbon dioxide emissions in continuous corn cropping systems from an alfisol in Ohio. Soil Till Res 104:39–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Verhulst N, Nelissen V, Jespers N, Haven H, Sayre KD, Raes D, Deckers J, Govaerts B (2011) Soil water content, maize yield and its stability as affected by tillage and crop residue management in rainfed semi-arid highlands. Plant Soil 344:73–85CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Wander MM, Bollero GA (1999) Soil quality assessment of tillage impacts in Illinois. Soil Sci Soc Am J 63:961–971CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- West TA, Post WM (2002) Soil organic carbon sequestration rates by tillage and crop rotation: A global data analysis. Soil Sci Soc Am J 66:1930–1946CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Wright AL, Hons FM (2005) Soil Carbon and nitrogen storage in aggregates from different tillage and crop regimes. Soil Sci Soc Am J 69:141–147Google Scholar
- Yang XM, Kay BD (2001) Rotation and tillage effects on soil organic carbon sequestration in a typic Hapludalf in southern Ontario. Soil Till Res 59:107–114CrossRefGoogle Scholar