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Soil-water conservation as affected by primary tillage practices
17
Citations
5
References
1985
Year
EngineeringLand UseSoil SciencePrimary Tillage PracticesSustainable AgricultureAgricultural EconomicsSoil DisturbanceSoil ConservationLand ApplicationSoil ManagementPlant Soil 1985Land DegradationTillage ToolDoveton Series
An investigation of water conservation as affected by different primary tillage methods was conducted on a soil of the Doveton series (fine-loamy, mixed, thermic family of Rhodic Paleudults), where a direct sampling technique was used to monitor the soil-water profiles. Soil samples were taken for the period just prior to early winter tillage to two weeks before the maize crop flowered. The results showed that tillage practices which maintain higher levels of surface residues retained more water than practices which by their mode of soil disturbance leave soil surfaces relatively ‘clean’. Measured differences in soil physical properties and possibly also surface residue distribution resulting from tillage were used to explain why reduced tillage systems provided better water conservation. S. Mr. J. Plant Soil 1985, 2: 21–26
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