Tillage - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Tillage

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Title: Tillage


1
Tillage
  • Chapter 10

2
What is Tillage?
  • the practice of keeping the soil mellow (soft)
    and free from weeds mechanically (physically)
  • can be seedbed preparation or postemergence
    cultivation

3
What are the purposes of tillage?
  • 1) develop soil tilth (physical condition of the
    soil)
  • 2) kill weeds
  • 3) manage crop residue

4
What is a seedbed?
  • place where seeds germinate nourish young
    plants
  • must be firm to allow seed to come in contact
    with soil particles to absorb moisture
  • must be pourous to allow air to move, root
    development, water movement
  • water will not easily penetrate hard soil to get
    to roots

5
Seedbed Characteristics
  • if soil is too loose, rain will wash away young
    plants
  • some soils have excess water
  • oxygen is needed by roots
  • air and water conduct heat more rapidly than
    soil, looser soils warm up sooner
  • plant residue on surface insulates, warms up
    slower, also provides buffer against wind

6
What is Soil Tilth?
  • The physical condition of the soil
  • fitness for cultivation

7
How is good soil tilth developed?
  • till at proper time to maintain proper
    aggregation
  • too wet during tillage makes soil lumpy, too dry
    during tillage makes soil too fine and likely to
    blow
  • over tillage will destroy soil structure and lead
    to soil compaction

8
What is the definition of a weed?
  • a plant that grows out of place
  • -tillage can cut roots or bury weeds

9
Is crop residue a benefit or detriment?
  • definitely a benefit
  • helps control erosion, retain water, improve tilth

10
What is primary tillage?
  • the first tillage operation of a season
  • loosen soil to permit air and water to penetrate
  • dark soils absorb light, warm up quicker
  • residue insulates, warms slower
  • in wet areas soil is plowed
  • in dry areas leave residue

11
What are the types of tillage equipment?
  • Moldboard Plow inverts soil, turns residue under
    soil surface

12
Disk Plow
  • rolling disks, similar to moldboard plow, better
    in sticky soils

13
One-Way Disk Plow
  • for dry soils, leaves more residue on soil
    surface than moldboard and disk plow

14
What is summerfallow?
  • tilling uncropped land in summer
  • primary tillage is deepest, rest shallower
  • leave residue

15
Chisel Plow
  • does not invert soil, uses chisels or sweeps that
    shatter the soil
  • leaves residue on surface

16
What is Hardpan?
  • compacted soil layer below the soil surface
  • created by continuous tillage at the same depth

17
How can hardpan be corrected?
  • use a subsoiler

18
Disk Harrow
  • similar to disk plow except smaller discs,
    tandem. cuts residue, but leaves on surface

19
What is secondary tillage?
  • all tillage operations after primary
  • till at shallower depth

20
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21
Spike-Tooth Harrow
  • steel spikes that break soil crust, uproot small
    weeds

22
Rod Weeder
  • rod turns as it is pulled beneath the soil
  • rod turns opposite direction as wheels, lifts
    weeds and coarse material to surface
  • packs seedbed

23
Rotary Hoe
  • hoe wheels on long shaft dig into soil (shallow)
  • usually mounted on tractor for row crops

24
What is minimum tillage?
  • delay primary tillage until seeding

25
What are the benefits of minimum tillage?
  • 1) soil surface is left covered residue (conserve
    moisture)
  • 2) redidue protects soil from erosion
  • 3) reduced costs (fewer operations)
  • 4) soil tilth improved (less compaction)
  • -Weeds are controlled with chemicals

26
What is stripcropping?
  • alternating summerfallow and cropped fields

27
What is contour tillage?
  • strip cropping so that fields are all at the same
    elevation (along hills)
  • slows water runoff

28
What is Terracing?
  • earth structure built across the slope to hold
    water

29
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