Conservation tillage influence on carbon dynamics under mediterranean conditions

Intensity of tillage practices can enhance organic matter decomposition, increasing CO2 emissions from soil to the atmosphere. Conservation tillage (CT) has been proposed as a means of counteracting potential damages to the environment. In this study the effects of two CT systems, reduced tillage in a long-term experiment (RTL) and no-tillage in a short-term experiment (NTS), were compared to traditional tillage (TT) in the long (TTL) and short-term experiments (TTS). CO2 fluxes, total soil organic carbon (SOC) and dehydrogenase activity (DHA) were evaluated at 0-5, 5-10 and 10-15 cm depths throughout the three years studied (Oct. 2006-Jul. 2009). Traditional tillage increased CO2 emissions compared to CT. The CT treatments (RTL and NTS) accumulated more SOC in the surface layer (0-5 cm) than the TT treatments (TTL and TTS). SOC accumulation was moderate but DHA consistently increased in CT in the surface soil, especially with a legume crop included in the crop rotation. Values of stratification ratio of all parameters studied were higher in the CT treatments (RTL and NTS). The agricultural and environmental benefits derived from CT make this system recommendable for semi-arid Mediterranean rain-fed agriculture.

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Main Authors: López Garrido, Rosa, Madejón, Engracia, Moreno Lucas, Félix, Murillo Carpio, José Manuel
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Science publishing 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/90211
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spelling dig-irnas-es-10261-902112018-09-13T07:19:08Z Conservation tillage influence on carbon dynamics under mediterranean conditions López Garrido, Rosa Madejón, Engracia Moreno Lucas, Félix Murillo Carpio, José Manuel Intensity of tillage practices can enhance organic matter decomposition, increasing CO2 emissions from soil to the atmosphere. Conservation tillage (CT) has been proposed as a means of counteracting potential damages to the environment. In this study the effects of two CT systems, reduced tillage in a long-term experiment (RTL) and no-tillage in a short-term experiment (NTS), were compared to traditional tillage (TT) in the long (TTL) and short-term experiments (TTS). CO2 fluxes, total soil organic carbon (SOC) and dehydrogenase activity (DHA) were evaluated at 0-5, 5-10 and 10-15 cm depths throughout the three years studied (Oct. 2006-Jul. 2009). Traditional tillage increased CO2 emissions compared to CT. The CT treatments (RTL and NTS) accumulated more SOC in the surface layer (0-5 cm) than the TT treatments (TTL and TTS). SOC accumulation was moderate but DHA consistently increased in CT in the surface soil, especially with a legume crop included in the crop rotation. Values of stratification ratio of all parameters studied were higher in the CT treatments (RTL and NTS). The agricultural and environmental benefits derived from CT make this system recommendable for semi-arid Mediterranean rain-fed agriculture. Peer Reviewed 2014-01-30T21:36:08Z 2014-01-30T21:36:08Z 2014 2014-01-30T21:36:08Z artículo http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 doi: 10.1016/S1002-0160(13)60081-8 issn: 1002-0160 Pedosphere 24 (1): 65-75 (2014) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/90211 10.1016/S1002-0160(13)60081-8 en none Science publishing
institution IRNAS ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-irnas-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del IRNAS España
language English
description Intensity of tillage practices can enhance organic matter decomposition, increasing CO2 emissions from soil to the atmosphere. Conservation tillage (CT) has been proposed as a means of counteracting potential damages to the environment. In this study the effects of two CT systems, reduced tillage in a long-term experiment (RTL) and no-tillage in a short-term experiment (NTS), were compared to traditional tillage (TT) in the long (TTL) and short-term experiments (TTS). CO2 fluxes, total soil organic carbon (SOC) and dehydrogenase activity (DHA) were evaluated at 0-5, 5-10 and 10-15 cm depths throughout the three years studied (Oct. 2006-Jul. 2009). Traditional tillage increased CO2 emissions compared to CT. The CT treatments (RTL and NTS) accumulated more SOC in the surface layer (0-5 cm) than the TT treatments (TTL and TTS). SOC accumulation was moderate but DHA consistently increased in CT in the surface soil, especially with a legume crop included in the crop rotation. Values of stratification ratio of all parameters studied were higher in the CT treatments (RTL and NTS). The agricultural and environmental benefits derived from CT make this system recommendable for semi-arid Mediterranean rain-fed agriculture.
format artículo
author López Garrido, Rosa
Madejón, Engracia
Moreno Lucas, Félix
Murillo Carpio, José Manuel
spellingShingle López Garrido, Rosa
Madejón, Engracia
Moreno Lucas, Félix
Murillo Carpio, José Manuel
Conservation tillage influence on carbon dynamics under mediterranean conditions
author_facet López Garrido, Rosa
Madejón, Engracia
Moreno Lucas, Félix
Murillo Carpio, José Manuel
author_sort López Garrido, Rosa
title Conservation tillage influence on carbon dynamics under mediterranean conditions
title_short Conservation tillage influence on carbon dynamics under mediterranean conditions
title_full Conservation tillage influence on carbon dynamics under mediterranean conditions
title_fullStr Conservation tillage influence on carbon dynamics under mediterranean conditions
title_full_unstemmed Conservation tillage influence on carbon dynamics under mediterranean conditions
title_sort conservation tillage influence on carbon dynamics under mediterranean conditions
publisher Science publishing
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/90211
work_keys_str_mv AT lopezgarridorosa conservationtillageinfluenceoncarbondynamicsundermediterraneanconditions
AT madejonengracia conservationtillageinfluenceoncarbondynamicsundermediterraneanconditions
AT morenolucasfelix conservationtillageinfluenceoncarbondynamicsundermediterraneanconditions
AT murillocarpiojosemanuel conservationtillageinfluenceoncarbondynamicsundermediterraneanconditions
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