Abstract
Maize root growth is negatively affected by compacted layers in the surface (e.g. agricultural traffic) and subsoil layers (e.g. claypans). Both kinds of soil mechanical impedances often coexist in maize fields, but the combined effects on root growth have seldom been studied. Soil physical properties and maize root abundance were determined in three different soils of the Rolling Pampa of Argentina, in conventionally-tilled (CT) and zero-tilled (ZT) fields cultivated with maize. In the soil with a light Bt horizon (loamy Typic Argiudoll, Chivilcoy site), induced plough pans were detected in CT plots at a depth of 0-0.12 m through significant increases in bulk density (1.15 to 1.27 Mg m-3) and cone (tip angle of 60 º) penetrometer resistance (7.18 to 9.37 MPa in summer from ZT to CT, respectively). This caused a reduction in maize root abundance of 40-80 % in CT compared to ZT plots below the induced pans. Two of the studied soils had hard-structured Bt horizons (clay pans), but in only one of them (silty clay loam Abruptic Argiudoll, Villa Lía site) the expected penetrometer resistance increases (up to 9 MPa) were observed with depth. In the other clay pan soil (silty clay loam Vertic Argiudoll, Pérez Millán site), penetrometer resistance did not increase with depth but reached 14.5 MPa at 0.075 and 0.2 m depth in CT and ZT plots, respectively. However, maize root abundance was stratified in the first 0.2 m at the Villa Lía and Pérez Millán sites. There, the hard Bt horizons did not represent an absolute but a relative mechanical impedance to maize roots, by the observed root clumping through desiccation cracks.
Highlights
Deep reaching compaction in many fertile soils of the world, often managed under modern, industrialagricultural management, is an issue of great concern (Hamza & Anderson, 2005)
In this study we report field results obtained in three different soils, under conventional tillage (CT) and Zero tillage (ZT) management regimes
At each site we investigated the occurrence of man-made and genetic soil compaction and the effects on maize root abundance and root distribution
Summary
Deep reaching compaction in many fertile soils of the world, often managed under modern, industrialagricultural management, is an issue of great concern (Hamza & Anderson, 2005) In such soils it is often the frequent and repeated use of conventional tillage (CT: e.g. mouldboard- and disc- ploughs, disk harrows) that results in the formation of induced plough pans in subsoil (Canarache, 1991). Conservation tillage minimizes agricultural traffic (Hamza & Anderson, 2005; Raper, 2005), wheel tracks are not erased in ZT topsoils (Botta et al, 2006). This can contribute to increase surface compaction problems
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