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Projection of soil organic carbon reserves in the Argentine Rolling Pampa under different agronomic scenarios. Relationship of these reserves with some soil properties
Resumen
The soil organic carbon (SOC) of the Argiudolls of the Argentine Rolling Pampa evolves rapidly. Currently,
the soils richest in SOC are cultivated with intensified crop sequences (e.g. maize-double cropped wheat/soybean,
MWS) under no tillage (NT) and the poorest ones with soybean monoculture (S) under NT. There are great uncertainties
about the future projections of SOC reserves and soil fertility associated with changes in land use and
[ver mas...]
The soil organic carbon (SOC) of the Argiudolls of the Argentine Rolling Pampa evolves rapidly. Currently,
the soils richest in SOC are cultivated with intensified crop sequences (e.g. maize-double cropped wheat/soybean,
MWS) under no tillage (NT) and the poorest ones with soybean monoculture (S) under NT. There are great uncertainties
about the future projections of SOC reserves and soil fertility associated with changes in land use and management.
The aim of this study was to predict soil fertility in 2032, by: a) validating the simple AMG model in long-term experiments
of the Rolling Pampa, b) correlating the SOC and active carbon pools (SOCm and Ca, respectively) modeled
for 2008 with some soil properties, and c) simulating the evolution of SOC reserves under different agronomic scenarios,
using the AMG model, starting from rich and poor SOC soils of the Rolling Pampa. The AMG model was able to provide
satisfactory simulation of the SOC reserves (R2
= 0.87) and showed good quality of fit between Ca and particulate organic
carbon (POC) and SOCm and structural stability index (SSI), indicating that the AMG model could project
SOC reserves and soil fertility. In rich SOC soils, the maintenance or increase in mean crop yields (MWS NT and
MWS with high yields under NT, MWS opt., respectively) caused no changes, whereas the conversion to S under NT
reduced the SOC reserves by 12%. Maize residue removal caused 4.5% SOC loss in MWS NT and no changes in
MWS opt. In poor SOC soils, the continuity of S under NT and the conversion to MWS NT produced no changes; the
passage to continuous or periodic shallow tillage caused 6% SOC loss; and the conversion to Miscanthus x giganteus
produced an increase of 9% in SOC.
[Cerrar]
Fuente
Open agriculture journal 9 : 30-41. (2015)
Fecha
2015
Editorial
Bentham Open
ISSN
1874-3315
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Derechos de acceso
Abierto
Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)