Title: Soil%20structure%20and%20C%20sequestration%20under%20no%20tillage%20management
1Soil structure and C sequestration under no
tillage management
- Gayoung Yoo and Michelle M. Wander
- Department of Natural Resources and Environmental
Sciences - University of Illinois
2Variable no tillage influences by sites
- No tillage (NT) does not always increase C
sequestration.
- Soils are fine textured and poorly drained where
soil erosion is not a major factor or yield under
NT is reduced.
3Background
No till
Conventional till
4OUTPUT Soil erosion
INPUT Crop yield
SOC
microbes
Soil temp.
Soil water
SOIL STRUCTURE
5Soil structure and SOM dynamic models
6Site description
DeKalb Poorly drained Drummer silty clay loam
- Randomized complete block design
- 3 blocks
- Fixed effect site, till
- Random effect year, date
Monmouth Somewhat poorly drained Muscatine silt
loam
Treatments NT no tillage CT conventional
tillage
7Objectives
- Investigate soil CO2 evolution patterns where
tillage practices have had varied influences on
SOC - Characterize site- and treatment-based
differences in soil physical factors that might
control C dynamics - Determine whether the soil structural quality
explains differences in SOC mineralization
8Experimental methods
- Soil CO2 efflux measurement
- Li Cor 6400 (from 2000 to 2002)
- Environmental variables
- Soil temperature, soil moisture, penetration
resistance (PR), bulk density, and pore size
distribution - Statistical method
- ANOVA using PROC MIXED
- Non-linear regression using PROC NLIN (SAS
Institute)
9Seasonal mean and specific C mineralization
10Soil physical parameters
Penetration resistance
-- blows m-1--
91.57b
58.83a
70.47 b
59.97a
Effect Soil temp.
-----oC-------
Site DeKalb 18.85a
Monmouth 18.24a
Tillage NT 18.54a
CT 18.55a
Bulk density
---g cm-3---
1.32a
1.39b
1.41b
1.31a
Soil water
----------
25.03b
22.86a
24.30a
23.6a
Means, estimated with least square means,
within site or tillage not followed by the same
letter were significantly different at P lt 0.05.
11Correlation coefficients
Soil temp Soil water PR BD Specific C min rates
Soil temp 1 0.03 -0.01 0.31 0.27
Soil water 1 -0.19 -0.30 -0.34
PR 1 0.30 - -0.06
BD 1 -0.16
Specific C min rates 1
12Development of Q10 equation
- Basic Q10 model with soil temperature and
gravimetric water contents - Soil CO2 evolution
- (b
rSWC)Q10 (Ts-10)/10
Site Q10 b r R2
DeKalb 2.93 7.29 -0.18 0.63
Monmouth 2.93 7.29 -0.18 0.63
R2 (validation)
0.67
0.31
13Pore size distribution
Total pore Total pore Macropore (gt 30 um) Macropore (gt 30 um) Micropore ( lt 30 um)
-------------------- ml g-1 soil --------------------- -------------------- ml g-1 soil --------------------- -------------------- ml g-1 soil --------------------- -------------------- ml g-1 soil --------------------- -------------------- ml g-1 soil ---------------------
DeKalb NT 0.444 a 0.104 a 0.104 a 0.334 a 0.334 a
DeKalb CT 0.442 a 0.109 a 0.109 a 0.340 a 0.340 a
Monmouth NT 0.339 a 0.068 a 0.068 a 0.271 a 0.271 a
Monmouth CT 0.379 b 0.086 b 0.086 b 0.294 a 0.294 a
Least square means within site not followed by
the same letter were significantly different at P
lt 0.05. Nissen et al. (unpublished data)
14Least limiting water range(da Silva et al.,
1994 Topp et al., 1994)
0.5
Volumetric water content (cm3 cm-3)
0.2
1.1
1.5
Bulk density (g cm-3)
15The calculation of LLWR Pedotransfer functions
(da Silva and Kay, 1997)
Limits Functions Data input
?fc SOC, clay, bulk density
?afp bulk density
?wp SOC, clay, bulk density
?sr SOC, clay, bulk density
wet
(1-Db/2.65) 0.1
dry
16Mean LLWRs
Site Till ?fc ?fc ?afp
------------------------ cm3 cm-3 ------------------------------- ------------------------ cm3 cm-3 ------------------------------- ------------------------ cm3 cm-3 ------------------------------- ------------------------ cm3 cm-3 ------------------------------- ------------------------ cm3 cm-3 ------------------------------- ------------------------ cm3 cm-3 ------------------------------- ------------------------ cm3 cm-3 -------------------------------
DeKalb NT 0.541 c 0.379 b 0.379 b
DeKalb CT 0.560 d 0.412 a 0.412 a
Monmouth NT 0.427 b 0.360 a 0.360 a
Monmouth CT 0.411 a 0.384 a 0.384 a
?wp ?sr
0.347 c 0.346 c
0.353 c 0.322 b
LLWR
0.032 a
0.059 a
0.083 b
0.141 c
0.212 b 0.276 b
0.196 a 0.243 a
17LLWR and SOC mineralization
18Summary and Conclusions
- Inherently high protective capacity soils
- High clay content, high SOC, high macroporosity,
low BD, low LLWR - Not likely to be affected much by practices that
alter structure - Intermediate protective capacity soils
- Medium clay content, medium SOC, medium
macroporosity, high BD and LLWR - Physical properties can be altered to affect
biological activity and C sequestration by
tillage practice
19Acknowledgement
- I would also like to thank Todd Nissen, Verónica
Rodríquez, Inigo Virto, and Iosu Garcia for their
invaluable assistance in the field. - Special thanks to Emily Marriott, Ariane Peralta,
and Carmen Ugarte for their helpful discussion,
editing, and advice.