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Book ChapterDOI

Conservation agriculture, improving soil quality for sustainable production systems?

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TLDR
In this article, a comparative soil quality evaluation is performed in which the performance of the system is determined in relation to alternatives, and the results show that the effect of a reduction in tillage on the variation in total porosity with depth may be related to differences in traffic on different sites, or on soil quality at the time tillage was reduced or stopped.
Abstract
Conservation agriculture has been proposed as a widely adapted set of management principles that can assure more sustainable agricultural production. Conservation agriculture removes the emphasis from the tillage component alone and addresses a more enhanced concept of the complete agricultural system. Applying conservation agriculture essentially means altering literally generations of traditional farming practices and implement use. Within the framework of agricultural production, high soil quality equates to the ability of the soil to maintain a high productivity without significant soil or environmental degradation. A comparative soil quality evaluation is one in which the performance of the system is determined in relation to alternatives. Inconsistent effects of a reduction in tillage on the variation in total porosity with depth may be related to differences in traffic on different sites, or on soil quality at the time tillage was reduced or stopped.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Conservation agriculture and ecosystem services: An overview

TL;DR: The potential and limitations of conservation agriculture for low productivity, small-scale farming systems in Sub Saharan Africa and South Asia is discussed in this article. But, the authors highlight some research priorities for ecosystem services in conservational agriculture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Limited potential of no-till agriculture for climate change mitigation

TL;DR: In this paper, the potential for climate change mitigation through soil carbon sequestration that is possible from a change to no-till agriculture has been widely overstated, arguing that the potential of climate adaptation through carbon sequestering is limited.
Journal ArticleDOI

When does no-till yield more? A global meta-analysis

TL;DR: The authors conducted a meta-analysis to evaluate the influence of various crop and environmental variables on no-till relative to conventional tillage yields using data obtained from peer-reviewed publications (678 studies with 6005 paired observations, representing 50 crops and 63 countries).
Journal ArticleDOI

Achieving yield gains in wheat.

TL;DR: Crop development should favour spike fertility to maximize harvest index so phenology must be tailored to different photoperiods, and sensitivity to unpredictable weather must be modulated to reduce conservative responses that reduce harvest index.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crop residue management and soil health: A systems analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed crop residue management practices, mainly surface retention, incorporation or removal, describing their advantages and limitations in cereal-based agroecosystems in developing countries.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in pore structure in a no-till chronosequence of silt loam soils, southern Ontario

TL;DR: In this article, short-term changes in soil micromorphology attributed to conversion to no-till from conventionally tilled management are evaluated and shown that the number of 30-to 100-µm diameter pore sizes decreased after 4 years of no-to-no till management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of tillage, stubble management and crop rotation on nematode populations in a long-term field experiment

TL;DR: Results showed that stubble retention contributed for enormous population density of free-living (beneficial) nematode while conventional cultivation, irrespective of stubble management, contributed for suppressing plant-parasitic nematodes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing biological soil quality with chloroform fumigation-incubation: why subtract a control?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated chloroform fumigation-incubation with subtraction of a control (CFI/F) and without subtracting a control to assess biological soil quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seasonal fluctuations in soil microbial biomass carbon, phosphorus, and activity in no-till and reduced-chemical-input maize agroecosystems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors observed the fluctuations in microbial biomass C, N, P, and S over three cropping seasons in continuous maize and 2-year maize-wheat-soybean rotation agroecosystems under no-till and reduced-chemical-input management.
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