The accurate quantification of crop residue biomass left on the soil after harvesting is important, due to the agricultural and environmental issues associated with the management of soil organic matter in croplands. This quantification is difficult in farmers' fields due to a high variability of crop residue distribution on soil surface, because of harvesting operations. The objective of this study was to provide, for measuring crop residue biomass in the field, an accurate, robust and generic method for a large range of crops. This method relies on the use of sampling microplots (0.5 × 0.5 m), located along a transect and taking into account harvesting operations (harvesting direction and width) to capture this variability. This method was tested from 2009 to 2011, in farmers' plots after harvesting, on wheat, grain maize, spring barley, field pea, rapeseed, fababean and sunflower crops. The comparison of results obtained with one or two transects (one perpendicular and the other diagonally across harvesting direction) shows that the accuracy of the estimates is sufficient using a single transect, allowing for a reduction of the working time. The accuracy of this method of collection is not affected by soil management practices (shallow till versus no-till).
CITATION STYLE
Thiebeau, P., & Recous, S. (2016). Une méthode pour quantifier les biomasses de résidus de récolte à la surface des sols après la moisson. Cahiers Agricultures, 25(4). https://doi.org/10.1051/cagri/2016027
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