Abstract

A national soil quality monitoring program was established in 1990 to address concerns that the quality of Canada's agricultural soils was in decline. The British Columbia benchmark site (01-BC) was established in 1991 and is located on the Pelly soil series (Orthic Humic Gleysol) supporting a corn-forage-pasture rotation in the Lower Mainland ecoregion. The objectives of this study were to report on the differences in: (1) the measured soil properties for the 5-yr period between baseline data collection in 1991 and resampling in 1996 and (2) the properties measured annually as indicators of soil compaction. A 25-m (25-m grid was used at the site to locate sampling points for bulk density and collecting soil samples of the Ap, BCg, and Cg horizons, as well as the measurement locations for saturated hydraulic conductivity and penetration resistance. A 5-yr interval sampling regime was used to sample the Ap, BCg, and Cg horizons and bulk density. Saturated hydraulic conductivity and penetration resistance were sampled annually from 1992 to 1998. Between 1991 and 1996 in the A horizons, pH, available P, C:N ratio and bulk density increased by 4.6, 7.8, 2.5, and 8%, respectively, and available K, total C and total N decreased by 21, 16.5, and 18.3%, respectively. In the BCg horizon, pH, available P and C:N ratio increased by 5, 126, and 8%, respectively, and the available K and total N both decreased by 21%. Bulk density remained unchanged. The assumption that the soil chemical properties in the Cg horizon would remain stable during the study period did not hold. The trends detected for the Cg horizon were similar to those measured for the upper two horizons. However, only the reductions in available K and total N and increases in C:N were significant. The changes in the soil physical properties measured at this site indicate that some soil compaction has occurred. Both bulk density at 20 cm and penetration resistance increased at all depths between 1994 and 1998, which coincided with the time period that grazing was included in the crop rotation. Field saturated hydraulic conductivity at 25 cm (Ap2 horizon), although highly variable from year to year also tended to be lower during the pasture rotation. The penetration resistance measurements, which detected changes at all depths, appeared to be a more sensitive indicator of soil compaction than either bulk density or field saturated hydraulic conductivity. Key words: Soil quality, soil monitoring, soil properties, soil compaction, temporal change

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