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Impacts of conservation agriculture on soil aggregation and aggregate-associated N under an irrigated agroecosystem of the Indo-Gangetic Plains
Authors:Ranjan Bhattacharyya  T K Das  P Pramanik  V Ganeshan  A A Saad  A R Sharma
Affiliation:1. Indian Agricultural Research Institute, Pusa, New Delhi, 110 012, India
2. Directorate of Weed Science Research, Jabalpur, MP, India
Abstract:We evaluated impacts of conservation agriculture (zero tillage, bed planting and residue retention) on changes in total soil N (TSN) and aggregate-associated N storage in a sandy loam soil of the Indo-Gangetic Plains. Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) and wheat (Triticum aestivum) crops were grown during the first 3 years (2008–2011) and in the last year, maize (Zea mays) and wheat were cultivated. Results indicate that after 4 years the plots under zero tillage with bed planting (ZT-B) and zero tillage with flat planting (ZT-F) had 15 % higher TSN concentrations than conventional tillage and bed planting plots (CT-B) (0.63 g kg?1 soil) in the 0–5 cm soil layer. CT-B plots had lower soil bulk density that ZT plots in that layer. Plots under ZT-B (0.57 Mg ha?1) contained 20 % higher TSN stock in the 0–5 cm soil layer than CT-B plots (0.48 Mg ha?1). However, tillage had no impact on TSN concentration or stock in the sub-surface (5–15 and 15–30 cm) soil layers. Thus, in the 0–30 cm soil layer, ZT-B plots contained 6 and 5 % higher (P > 0.05) TSN stock compared with CT-B (2.15 Mg N ha?1) and CT-F (2.19 Mg N ha?1) plots respectively after 4 years. Plots that received cotton/maize + wheat residue (C/M + W RES) contained 16 % higher TSN concentration than plots with residues removed (N RES; 0.62 g kg?1 soil) in the surface (0–5 cm) layer. Plots with only cotton/maize residue (C/M RES) or only wheat residue (W RES) retention/incorporation had similar TSN concentrations and stocks in the subsurface layer. Plots under ZT-B also had more macroaggregates (0.25–8 mm) and greater mean weight diameter with lower silt + clay sized particles than CT-B plots in that layer. A greater proportion of large macroaggregates (2–8 mm) in the plots under C/M + W RES compared with N RES were observed. In the 5–15 cm soil layer ZT-B and C/M + W RES treated plots had more macroaggregates and greater mean weight diameter than CT-B and N RES treated plots, respectively. Because of the greater amount of large aggregates, plots under ZT-B and C/M + W RES had 49 and 35 % higher large macroaggregate-associated N stocks than CT-B (38 kg TSN ha?1) and N RES (40 kg TSN ha?1) plots, respectively, in the 0–5 cm soil layer, although aggregates had similar TSN concentrations in all plots. Both tillage and residue retention had greater effects on aggregate-associated N stocks in the 5–15 cm layers. In addition to N content within large macroaggregates, small macroaggregate-associated N contents were also positively affected by ZT-B and C/M + W RES. Tillage and residue retention interaction effects were not significant for all parameters. Thus, the adoption of ZT in permanent beds with crop residue addition is a better management option for improvement of soil N (and thus possibly a reduced dose of fertilizer N can be adopted in the long run), as the management practice has the potential to improve soil aggregation with greater accumulation of TSN within macroaggregates, and this trend would likely have additive effects with advancing years of the same management practices in this region.
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