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Journal ArticleDOI

The role of soil organic matter in maintaining soil quality in continuous cropping systems

D. W. Reeves
- 01 Nov 1997 - 
- Vol. 43, pp 131-167
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors focus on lessons learned from long-term continuous cropping experiments, focusing on the importance of maintaining and improving soil quality in a continuous crop system, which is critical to sustaining agricultural productivity and environmental quality for future generations.
Abstract
Maintenance and improvement of soil quality in continuous cropping systems is critical to sustaining agricultural productivity and environmental quality for future generations. This review focuses on lessons learned from long-term continuous cropping experiments. Soil organic carbon (SOC) is the most often reported attribute from long-term studies and is chosen as the most important indicator of soil quality and agronomic sustainability because of its impact on other physical, chemical and biological indicators of soil quality. Long-term studies have consistently shown the benefit of manures, adequate fertilization, and crop rotation on maintaining agronomic productivity by increasing C inputs into the soil. However, even with crop rotation and manure additions, continuous cropping results in a decline in SOC, although the rate and magnitude of the decline is affected by cropping and tillage system, climate and soil. In the oldest of these studies, the influence of tillage on SOC and dependent soil quality indicators can only be inferred from rotation treatments which included ley rotations (with their reduced frequency of tillage). The impact of tillage per se on SOC and soil quality has only been tested in the ‘long-term’ for about 30 yrs, since the advent of conservation tillage techniques, and only in developed countries in temperate regions. Long-term conservation tillage studies have shown that, within climatic limits: Conservation tillage can sustain or actually increase SOC when coupled with intensive cropping systems; and the need for sound rotation practices in order to maintain agronomic productivity and economic sustainability is more critical in conservation tillage systems than conventional tillage systems. Long-term tillage studies are in their infancy. Preserving and improving these valuable resources is critical to our development of soil management practices for sustaining soil quality in continuous cropping systems.

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Citations
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Multi-temporal assessment of land sensitivity to desertification in a fragile agro-ecosystem: Environmental indicators

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identified the most environmentally sensitive areas to desertification in the study area, assessing the environmental sensitivity area indices (ESAIs) of 1984 and 2008 to determine the effects of land reclamation processes, adjusting the MEDALUS factors for 2008 to obtain more reliable data at the local level, and monitoring the ESAI change over the studied area.
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Relationship between residue quality, decomposition patterns, and soil organic matter accumulation in a tropical sandy soil after 13 years

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated decomposition patterns and soil organic matter (SOM) accumulation of incorporated residues (10 mg/1 year−1) of different quality, and identify microbiological parameters sensitive to changes in SOM dynamics, in a 13-year-old field experiment on a sandy soil in Northeast Thailand.
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Long-term effects of fertilizer managements on crop yields and organic carbon storage of a typical rice–wheat agroecosystem of China

TL;DR: The results from a long-term experiment setup in 1980 in the Taihu Lake region, China, to address the yield sustainability, the dynamic changes of soil organic carbon (SOC) storage, and soil fertility in the rice-wheat ecosystem are presented in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial structures of soil organic carbon in tropical forests—A case study of Southeastern Tanzania

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted a carbon variability study in five common forest types of Southeastern Tanzania (coastal dry forest, Miombo woodland, teak plantation, pine plantation and cashew plantation) using conventional statistical methods, as well as geostatistics.
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Physico-chemical indicators and microarthropod communities as influenced by no-till, conventional tillage and nitrogen fertilisation after four years of continuous maize

TL;DR: In this article, a multidisciplinary study was carried out over four years in Northern Italy on a silt loam under continuous maize, where soil samples were taken from all plots at four depths (from 0 to 20 cm).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Organic matter and water-stable aggregates in soils

TL;DR: In this article, the effectiveness of various binding agents at different stages in the structural organization of aggregates is described and forms the basis of a model which illustrates the architecture of an aggregate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of factors controlling soil organic matter levels in Great Plains grasslands

TL;DR: In this article, a model of soil organic matter (SOM) quantity and composition was used to simulate steady-state organic matter levels for 24 grassland locations in the U.S. Great Plains.
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