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Pak. J. Bot., 43(2): 949-960, 2011.

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  Updated: 07-04-11

 

 

Crop Rotation Impact on Soil Quality

 

I. Aziz1., M. AsHraf., T. Mahmood2 and K.R. Islam3

 

Abstract: Management systems influence soil quality over time. A study was carried out on Vanmeter farm of the Ohio State University South Centers at Piketon Ohio, USA to evaluate the impact of crop rotations on soil quality from 2002 to 2007. The crop rotations comprised of continuous corn (CC), corn-soybean (CS) and corn–soybean-wheat-cowpea (CSW). Ten soil cores were collected at 0-7.5, 7.5-15, 15-22.5 and 22.5-30 cm, and sieved. The soils were analyzed for total microbial biomass (Cmic), basal respiration (BR) and specific maintenance respiration (qCO2) rates as biological quality indicators; total organic carbon (TC), active carbon (AC) and total nitrogen (TN) as chemical quality indicators; and aggregate stability (AS), particulate organic matter (POM) and total porosity (¦t) as physical quality parameters at different depths of soil. The inductive additive approach based on the concept of “higher value of any soil property except ¦t, a better indicator of soil quality” was used to calculate the biological (SBQ), chemical (SCQ), physical (SPQ) and composite soil quality (SQI) indices. The results showed that crop rotation had significant impact on Cmic, BR, qCO2, TC, AC, TN, AS and POM except ¦t at different depths of soil. The CSW had higher soil quality values than CC and CS. The values of selected soil quality properties under the given crop rotation significantly decreased except ¦t with increasing soil depth. The SBQ (23%), SCQ (16%), SPQ (7%) and SQI (15%) improved under CSW over time. The results imply that multiple cropping systems could be more effective for maintaining and enhancing soil quality than sole-cropping systems.

 


1Dept. of Agronomy, PMS Arid Agriculture University, Rawalpindi, Pakistan,

2Dept. of Environmental Sciences, PMS Arid Agriculture University, Rawalpindi, Pakistan,

3Soil and Water Resources, Ohio State University South Centers, Piketon, Ohio, USA, and Soil Drainage Research, USDA-ARS, Columbus, Ohio, USA


   
   

 

   
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