CARBON STOCK AND ITS COMPARTMENTS IN A SUBTROPICAL OXISOL UNDER LONG-TERM TILLAGE AND CROP ROTATION SYSTEMS

被引:30
|
作者
de Campos, Ben-Hur Costa [1 ]
Carneiro Amado, Telmo Jorge [2 ]
Bayer, Cimelio [3 ]
Nicoloso, Rodrigo da Silveira [4 ]
Fiorin, Jackson Ernani [5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Fed Inst Rio Grande Sul, BR-98200000 Ibiruba, RS, Brazil
[2] Univ Fed Santa Maria, Soil Dept, BR-97105900 Santa Maria, RS, Brazil
[3] Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Soil Dept, BR-91540000 Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil
[4] Embrapa Swine & Poultry, BR-89700000 Concordia, SC, Brazil
[5] Cruz Alta Univ, BR-98100970 Cruz Alta, RS, Brazil
[6] FUNDACEP, Fdn Ctr Experimentat & Res, Cruz Alta, RS, Brazil
来源
REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE CIENCIA DO SOLO | 2011年 / 35卷 / 03期
关键词
carbon sequestration; no-tillage; conventional tillage; soil management; SOIL ORGANIC-MATTER; BRAZILIAN CERRADO; MANAGEMENT INDEX; TROPICAL SOILS; NO-TILLAGE; SEQUESTRATION; STORAGE; ACCUMULATION; CULTIVATION; SATURATION;
D O I
10.1590/S0100-06832011000300016
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
Soil organic matter (SOM) plays a crucial role in soil quality and can act as an atmospheric C-CO2 sink under conservationist management systems. This study aimed to evaluate the long-term effects (19 years) of tillage (CT-conventional tillage and NT-no tillage) and crop rotations (R0-monoculture system, R1-winter crop rotation, and R2- intensive crop rotation) on total, particulate and mineral-associated organic carbon (C) stocks of an originally degraded Red Oxisol in Cruz Alta, RS, Southern Brazil. The climate is humid subtropical Cfa 2a (Koppen classification), the mean annual precipitation 1,774 mm and mean annual temperature 19.2 degrees C. The plots were divided into four segments, of which each was sampled in the layers 0-0.05, 0.05-0.10, 0.10-0.20, and 0.20-0.30 m. Sampling was performed manually by opening small trenches. The SOM pools were determined by physical fractionation. Soil C stocks had a linear relationship with annual crop C inputs, regardless of the tillage systems. Thus, soil disturbance had a minor effect on SOM turnover. In the 0-0.30 m layer, soil C sequestration ranged from 0 to 0.51 Mg ha(-1) yr(-1), using the CT R0 treatment as base-line; crop rotation systems had more influence on soil stock C than tillage systems. The mean C sequestration rate of the cropping systems was 0.13 Mg ha(-1) y(-1) higher in NT than CT. This result was associated to the higher C input by crops due to the improvement in soil quality under long-term no-tillage. The particulate C fraction was a sensitive indicator of soil management quality, while mineral-associated organic C was the main pool of atmospheric C fixed in this clayey Oxisol. The C retention in this stable SOM fraction accounts for 81 and 89% of total C sequestration in the treatments NT R1 and NT R2, respectively, in relation to the same cropping systems under CT. The highest C management index was observed in NT R2, confirming the capacity of this soil management practice to improve the soil C stock qualitatively in relation to CT R0. The results highlighted the diversification of crop rotation with cover crops as a crucial strategy for atmospheric C-CO2 sequestration and SOM quality improvement in highly weathered subtropical Oxisols.
引用
收藏
页码:805 / 817
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Carbon and Nitrogen Content of Soil Organic Matter and Microbial Biomass under Long-Term Crop Rotation and Tillage in Illinois, USA
    Zuber, Stacy M.
    Behnke, Gevan D.
    Nafziger, Emerson D.
    Villamil, Maria B.
    AGRICULTURE-BASEL, 2018, 8 (03):
  • [22] Thermal stability of soil organic carbon after long-term manure application across land uses and tillage systems in an oxisol
    Barreto, Matheus Sampaio C.
    Ramlogan, Marlon
    Oliveira, Dener Marcio S.
    Verburg, Ernst Eduard J.
    Elzinga, Evert J.
    Rouff, Ashaki A.
    Jemo, Martin
    Alleoni, Luis Reynaldo F.
    CATENA, 2021, 200
  • [23] Long-term subsoiling and tillage rotation increase carbon storage in soil aggregates and the abundance of autotrophs
    Shen, Ying
    Zhang, Renzheng
    Yang, Qian
    Liu, Zhen
    Li, Geng
    Han, Huifang
    Kuzyakov, Yakov
    Ning, Tangyuan
    APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 2024, 200
  • [24] Quantifying soil carbon change in a long-term tillage and crop rotation study across Iowa landscapes
    Al-Kaisi, Mahdi M.
    Kwaw-Mensah, David
    SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 2020, 84 (01) : 182 - 202
  • [25] Long-term cropping systems and tillage management effects on soil organic carbon stock and steady state level of C sequestration rates in a semiarid environment
    Barbera, V.
    Poma, I.
    Gristina, L.
    Novara, A.
    Egli, M.
    LAND DEGRADATION & DEVELOPMENT, 2012, 23 (01) : 82 - 91
  • [26] Clay Mineralogy of Subtropical Soils under Long-Term Organic Fertilization in No-Tillage Systems
    Pedron, Fabricio de Aratujo
    Lourenzi, Cledimar Rogerio
    Ceretta, Carlos Aberto
    Lorensi, Juliana
    Cancian, Adriana
    REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE CIENCIA DO SOLO, 2018, 42
  • [27] Soil carbon stratification affected by long-term tillage and cropping systems in southern Brazil
    Ferreira, Ademir de Oliveira
    Carneiro Amado, Telmo Jorge
    Nicoloso, Rodrigo da Silveira
    de Moraes Sa, Joao Carlos
    Fiorin, Jackson Ernani
    Santos Hansel, Damaris Sulzbach
    Menefee, Dorothy
    SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH, 2013, 133 : 65 - 74
  • [28] Long-term changes in soil organic matter under conventional tillage and no-tillage systems in semiarid Morocco
    Bessam, F
    Mrabet, R
    SOIL USE AND MANAGEMENT, 2003, 19 (02) : 139 - 143
  • [29] RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SOYBEAN CYST NEMATODE, HETERODERA GLYCINES, AND SOIL NEMATODE COMMUNITIES UNDER LONG-TERM TILLAGE AND CROP ROTATION SYSTEMS
    Cheng, Z.
    Melakeberhan, H.
    Mennan, S.
    Grewal, P. S.
    NEMATROPICA, 2018, 48 (01) : 101 - 115
  • [30] IMPACT OF LONG-TERM TILLAGE AND CROP ROTATION ON CONCENTRATION OF SOIL PARTICULATE ORGANIC MATTER ASSOCIATED CARBON AND NITROGEN
    Aziz, Irfan
    Mahmood, Tariq
    Islam, Khandakar Rafiq
    PAKISTAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES, 2014, 51 (04): : 827 - 834