An 11-yr study was conducted on a coarse-textured Brown Chernozemic soil in the semiarid prairie of southwestern Saskatchewan. Soil was sampled after 3, 7 and 11 yr, and the results were used to assess the influence of fallow frequency and tillage on selected soil quality attributes [e.g. total soil organic C and N, microbial biomass C (MB-C) and microbial biomass N (MB-N), C mineralization (C(min)) and N mineralization (N(min)), and specific respiratory activity (SRA)] in the 0- to 7.5-cm and 7.5- to 15-cm depths. Although it took 11 yr before we observed significant treatment effects on total organic C or N, effects on C(min) and N(min) were observed in 7 yr in the 0- to 7.5-cm depth and by 11 yr, MB and SPA also showed significant treatment effects in this depth. Generally, soil quality attributes were greater in no-tillage (NT) systems than in conventional mechanical tillage (CT) or minimum tillage (MT), and greater in continuous wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) (Coat W) than in fallow-wheat (F-W) systems. With time, the labile constituents tended to increase under the Coat W cropping, but to decrease when F-W was coupled with MT. After 11 yr there was a strong, direct association between the labile attributes (viz., C(min), N(min) and MB-C) in the 0- to 7.5-cm depth and the mean annual straw produced (kg ha-1 yr-1) in the four cropping systems tested. Of the soil quality attributes tested, C(min) and N(min) were the most sensitive indices to tillage and fallow frequency effects.
CITATION STYLE
Campbell, C. A., McConkey, B. G., Biederbeck, V. O., Zentner, R. P., Tessier, S., & Hahn, D. L. (1997). Tillage and fallow frequency effects on selected soil quality attributes in a coarse-textured Brown Chernozem. Canadian Journal of Soil Science, 77(4), 497–505. https://doi.org/10.4141/S97-003
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