Paper No. 5
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM-6:00 PM
Soil Carbon Dioxide Emission and Carbon Content Under Dryland Crops. II. Effects of Tillage, Cropping Sequence, and Nitrogen Fertilization (Gracenet Project)
Management practices are needed to reduce soil CO2 emission and increase C sequestration under dryland cropping system. The effects of tillage, cropping sequence, and N fertilization were evaluated on soil surface CO2 flux, soil total C content at 0- to 120-cm depth, and soil temperature and water content at 0- to 15-cm from April to October, 2006 and 2007 in eastern Montana. Tillage and cropping sequences were no-tilled continuous malt barley (NTCB), no-tilled pea-malt barley (NTP-B), no-tilled fallow-malt barley (NTF-B) and conventional-tilled fallow-malt barley (CTF-B) with split plot application of two N rates (0 and 80 kg N ha-1) to barley. Tillage and cropping sequence did not influence CO2 flux in the second phase of the cropping sequence. In 2006, CO2 flux was greater with 80 than with 0 kg N ha-1 in NTCB, NTF-B, and CTF-B in June and August following substantial rain. In 2007, CO2 flux was greater with 80 than with 0 kg N ha-1 in NTP-B and CTF-B in June and July but was greater with 0 than with 80 kg N ha-1 in NTCB and NTF-B in July following rain. Soil temperature varied with treatments. Averaged across measurement dates, CO2 flux was greater in NTCB and NTP-B with 80 kg N ha-1 than in NTF-B with 0 and 80 kg N ha-1. Soil temperature was greater in CTF-B with 0 kg N ha-1 than in NTP-B and CTF-B with 80 kg N ha-1 in 2006. Soil water content was greater in CTF-B with 0 kg N ha-1 than in other treatments. Soil total C was not influenced by treatments. Although NTF-B reduced CO2 emission, continuous cropping with N fertilization increased the emission probably by increasing root respiration due to increased biomass production.
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