Tillage and mulching effects on physical properties of a tropical alfisol

The mechanization of field operations like seeding, spraying and harvesting in continuous zero-tillage may lead to a severe compaction of the surface layer of coarse textured tropical soils, especially when mulch is sparse or missing. Therefore, a 2 year (1982–1984) field experiment was initiated on...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Franzen, H., Ehlers, W.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100948
_version_ 1855541848982945792
author Franzen, H.
Ehlers, W.
author_browse Ehlers, W.
Franzen, H.
author_facet Franzen, H.
Ehlers, W.
author_sort Franzen, H.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The mechanization of field operations like seeding, spraying and harvesting in continuous zero-tillage may lead to a severe compaction of the surface layer of coarse textured tropical soils, especially when mulch is sparse or missing. Therefore, a 2 year (1982–1984) field experiment was initiated on an Alfisol in Nigeria to study the effect of tillage, mechanization and mulch on soil structure and physical properties. Three zero-tillage treatments and a plough treatment were compared. The disk-plough and one of the no-till treatments were highly mechanized: all the field work was performed with tractors and machines, and consisted of secondary bush clearing, crop cultivation and harvest. On the other two no-till treatments, the impact of machine load was reduced, wither by hand harvesting or by performing all field operations manually. These four tillage-traffic systems were either treated with mulch or left unmulched. There were four growing seasons, with maize (Zea mays L.) as a test crop. After 2 years of zero-tillage the bulk density (BD) and penetration resistance (PR) were significantly greater on plots with high mechanization compared with hand treated plots. Plots with hand harvest but otherwise mechanized were in between. Because of the hard-setting nature of the soil, the ploug heed plots with and without mulch exhibited a dramatic change in PR and BD during the season. On no-till the infiltration transmissivity (A) was greater and BD and PR were less in the mulched compared with the unmulched treatments. The gravel content of the topsoil was negatively correlated with BD and positively correlated with A. Geostatistical analysis revealed that within the experimental area there was a similar spatial distribution of gravel content and A after the first season. Because of the superimposing effect of gravel on BD, which cannot be accounted for by considering the gravel content per se, BD was adjusted by means of covariance analysis for evaluation of the treatment effects already mentioned. It was concluded that mechanization of a no-till system on sandy Alfisols may only be successful in the long run if appropriate measures like mulching, crop rotation and fallow systems are applied to regenerate soil structure and to enhance macroporosity.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace100948
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1994
publishDateRange 1994
publishDateSort 1994
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1009482025-01-27T15:00:52Z Tillage and mulching effects on physical properties of a tropical alfisol Franzen, H. Ehlers, W. harvesting tillage plots soil structure The mechanization of field operations like seeding, spraying and harvesting in continuous zero-tillage may lead to a severe compaction of the surface layer of coarse textured tropical soils, especially when mulch is sparse or missing. Therefore, a 2 year (1982–1984) field experiment was initiated on an Alfisol in Nigeria to study the effect of tillage, mechanization and mulch on soil structure and physical properties. Three zero-tillage treatments and a plough treatment were compared. The disk-plough and one of the no-till treatments were highly mechanized: all the field work was performed with tractors and machines, and consisted of secondary bush clearing, crop cultivation and harvest. On the other two no-till treatments, the impact of machine load was reduced, wither by hand harvesting or by performing all field operations manually. These four tillage-traffic systems were either treated with mulch or left unmulched. There were four growing seasons, with maize (Zea mays L.) as a test crop. After 2 years of zero-tillage the bulk density (BD) and penetration resistance (PR) were significantly greater on plots with high mechanization compared with hand treated plots. Plots with hand harvest but otherwise mechanized were in between. Because of the hard-setting nature of the soil, the ploug heed plots with and without mulch exhibited a dramatic change in PR and BD during the season. On no-till the infiltration transmissivity (A) was greater and BD and PR were less in the mulched compared with the unmulched treatments. The gravel content of the topsoil was negatively correlated with BD and positively correlated with A. Geostatistical analysis revealed that within the experimental area there was a similar spatial distribution of gravel content and A after the first season. Because of the superimposing effect of gravel on BD, which cannot be accounted for by considering the gravel content per se, BD was adjusted by means of covariance analysis for evaluation of the treatment effects already mentioned. It was concluded that mechanization of a no-till system on sandy Alfisols may only be successful in the long run if appropriate measures like mulching, crop rotation and fallow systems are applied to regenerate soil structure and to enhance macroporosity. 1994-01 2019-04-24T12:29:38Z 2019-04-24T12:29:38Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100948 en Limited Access Elsevier Franzen, H. & Ehlers, W. (1994). Tillage and mulching effects on physical properties of a tropical alfisol. Soil and Tillage Research, 28(3-4), 329-346.
spellingShingle harvesting
tillage
plots
soil structure
Franzen, H.
Ehlers, W.
Tillage and mulching effects on physical properties of a tropical alfisol
title Tillage and mulching effects on physical properties of a tropical alfisol
title_full Tillage and mulching effects on physical properties of a tropical alfisol
title_fullStr Tillage and mulching effects on physical properties of a tropical alfisol
title_full_unstemmed Tillage and mulching effects on physical properties of a tropical alfisol
title_short Tillage and mulching effects on physical properties of a tropical alfisol
title_sort tillage and mulching effects on physical properties of a tropical alfisol
topic harvesting
tillage
plots
soil structure
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100948
work_keys_str_mv AT franzenh tillageandmulchingeffectsonphysicalpropertiesofatropicalalfisol
AT ehlersw tillageandmulchingeffectsonphysicalpropertiesofatropicalalfisol