Yue Pan , Danyang Wang , Tingting Tan , Jing An , Xinxin Jin , Hongtao Zou , Yuling Zhang , Na Yu , Kadambot H.M. Siddique
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Intensive agriculture and excessive land use have significantly degraded soil structure, challenging the sustainable development of global agriculture. Organic amendments have proven effective in enhancing soil structure, increasing soil organic carbon (SOC), and regulating soil water-holding capacity while influencing soil physical and mechanical properties. However, the interplay between SOC fractions, soil water-retention capacity, and mechanical characteristics remains poorly understood. This study used a 10-month incubation experiment to evaluate the effects of different organic materials—straw (ST), biochar (BR), organic fertilizer (OR), and straw biochar (SBR)—applied at two proportions (1 % and 3 %) to assess their effects on SOC fractions, water-retention capacity, and mechanical properties of Alfisols in Northeast China. The results demonstrated that the type and proportion of organic material significantly influenced SOC and its fractions, which increased significantly with the 10-month incubation period. Higher SOC and mineral-associated organic carbon (MAOC) contents correlated with improved water retention and compressive resistance, with the 3 %-BR treatment showing the most significant effects. These findings highlight the importance of considering SOC and its role in water retention during tillage to avoid compaction, especially under high soil moisture conditions.
期刊介绍:
Soil & Tillage Research examines the physical, chemical and biological changes in the soil caused by tillage and field traffic. Manuscripts will be considered on aspects of soil science, physics, technology, mechanization and applied engineering for a sustainable balance among productivity, environmental quality and profitability. The following are examples of suitable topics within the scope of the journal of Soil and Tillage Research:
The agricultural and biosystems engineering associated with tillage (including no-tillage, reduced-tillage and direct drilling), irrigation and drainage, crops and crop rotations, fertilization, rehabilitation of mine spoils and processes used to modify soils. Soil change effects on establishment and yield of crops, growth of plants and roots, structure and erosion of soil, cycling of carbon and nutrients, greenhouse gas emissions, leaching, runoff and other processes that affect environmental quality. Characterization or modeling of tillage and field traffic responses, soil, climate, or topographic effects, soil deformation processes, tillage tools, traction devices, energy requirements, economics, surface and subsurface water quality effects, tillage effects on weed, pest and disease control, and their interactions.