First-year cover crop effects on the physical and hydraulic properties of the surface layer in a loamy soil

Autores
Villarreal, Rafael; Lozano, Luis Alberto; Melani, Esteban Miguel; Polich, Nicolás Guillermo; Salazar Landea, María Paz; Bellora, Guido Lautaro; Soracco, Carlos Germán
Año de publicación
2021
Idioma
inglés
Tipo de recurso
artículo
Estado
versión publicada
Descripción
Soil degradation is a global problem, threating its conservation and affecting agronomic production. No-tillage (NT) is the main management system for soil conservation world-wide. However, in Argentina, simplification of the crop sequence with high proportion of soybean under NT is a very common practice, leading to soil physical constrains. Crop sequence intensification through the inclusion of cover crops has been reported as an effective tool in the long-term for the enhancement of ecosystems services, improving NT performance. The objective of this work was to follow the evolution of the structural pore domain in the surface layer during the first year after the incorporation of cover crop (cover fallow of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and vetch (Vicia sp. L.), CF), as compared with bare fallow (BF), under NT management in a field experiment located in the Argentinean Depressed Pampas Region. Mini-infiltration and evaporation experiments were conducted in undisturbed soil samples (0-5 cm depth) in the laboratory in order to determine the pore size distribution (PoSD) and hydraulic conductivity (K (h)) functions in three different dates (after cover crop seeding, after maize seeding and before maize harvest) in order to follow the changes in soil pore functioning during the first year of cover cropping management. Changes in the soil pore functioning were observed in the short-term after the first cover crop cycle, showing the time-dependence of the hydraulic soil properties. These changes were mainly observed during the maize cycle. Under CF an increment of structural porosity (PS) was observed at the end of the maize crop cycle, while during the fallow period this variable remained relatively constant. K (h) and structural porosity connectivity (Cw) showed a rapid increment under BF during the fallow period, while under CF the increase was more gradual, which could be related to pore clogging and roots decay cycles. From the obtained results, we found that the introduction of cover crops under NT promotes the increment of a secondary pore system related to structural soil porosity during the first year and enhances the unsaturated hydraulic conductivity and pore connectivity, especially at the end of the summer crop cycle. Our results highlight the importance of including cover crops into the crop rotation to improve the structural porosity and its connectivity. As well, the results show the necessity of including the short-term changes in the study of soil hydraulics properties.
Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias y Forestales
Materia
Ciencias Agrarias
hydraulic conductivity
evaporation method
mini-infiltration
no-tillage
Nivel de accesibilidad
acceso abierto
Condiciones de uso
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Repositorio
SEDICI (UNLP)
Institución
Universidad Nacional de La Plata
OAI Identificador
oai:sedici.unlp.edu.ar:10915/159186

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spelling First-year cover crop effects on the physical and hydraulic properties of the surface layer in a loamy soilVillarreal, RafaelLozano, Luis AlbertoMelani, Esteban MiguelPolich, Nicolás GuillermoSalazar Landea, María PazBellora, Guido LautaroSoracco, Carlos GermánCiencias Agrariashydraulic conductivityevaporation methodmini-infiltrationno-tillageSoil degradation is a global problem, threating its conservation and affecting agronomic production. No-tillage (NT) is the main management system for soil conservation world-wide. However, in Argentina, simplification of the crop sequence with high proportion of soybean under NT is a very common practice, leading to soil physical constrains. Crop sequence intensification through the inclusion of cover crops has been reported as an effective tool in the long-term for the enhancement of ecosystems services, improving NT performance. The objective of this work was to follow the evolution of the structural pore domain in the surface layer during the first year after the incorporation of cover crop (cover fallow of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and vetch (Vicia sp. L.), CF), as compared with bare fallow (BF), under NT management in a field experiment located in the Argentinean Depressed Pampas Region. Mini-infiltration and evaporation experiments were conducted in undisturbed soil samples (0-5 cm depth) in the laboratory in order to determine the pore size distribution (PoSD) and hydraulic conductivity (K (h)) functions in three different dates (after cover crop seeding, after maize seeding and before maize harvest) in order to follow the changes in soil pore functioning during the first year of cover cropping management. Changes in the soil pore functioning were observed in the short-term after the first cover crop cycle, showing the time-dependence of the hydraulic soil properties. These changes were mainly observed during the maize cycle. Under CF an increment of structural porosity (PS) was observed at the end of the maize crop cycle, while during the fallow period this variable remained relatively constant. K (h) and structural porosity connectivity (Cw) showed a rapid increment under BF during the fallow period, while under CF the increase was more gradual, which could be related to pore clogging and roots decay cycles. From the obtained results, we found that the introduction of cover crops under NT promotes the increment of a secondary pore system related to structural soil porosity during the first year and enhances the unsaturated hydraulic conductivity and pore connectivity, especially at the end of the summer crop cycle. Our results highlight the importance of including cover crops into the crop rotation to improve the structural porosity and its connectivity. As well, the results show the necessity of including the short-term changes in the study of soil hydraulics properties.Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias y Forestales2021-09info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionArticulohttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501info:ar-repo/semantics/articuloapplication/pdfhttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/159186enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/issn/0167-1987info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1016/j.still.2021.105141info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)reponame:SEDICI (UNLP)instname:Universidad Nacional de La Platainstacron:UNLP2025-10-22T17:22:31Zoai:sedici.unlp.edu.ar:10915/159186Institucionalhttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/Universidad públicaNo correspondehttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/oai/snrdalira@sedici.unlp.edu.arArgentinaNo correspondeNo correspondeNo correspondeopendoar:13292025-10-22 17:22:31.777SEDICI (UNLP) - Universidad Nacional de La Platafalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv First-year cover crop effects on the physical and hydraulic properties of the surface layer in a loamy soil
title First-year cover crop effects on the physical and hydraulic properties of the surface layer in a loamy soil
spellingShingle First-year cover crop effects on the physical and hydraulic properties of the surface layer in a loamy soil
Villarreal, Rafael
Ciencias Agrarias
hydraulic conductivity
evaporation method
mini-infiltration
no-tillage
title_short First-year cover crop effects on the physical and hydraulic properties of the surface layer in a loamy soil
title_full First-year cover crop effects on the physical and hydraulic properties of the surface layer in a loamy soil
title_fullStr First-year cover crop effects on the physical and hydraulic properties of the surface layer in a loamy soil
title_full_unstemmed First-year cover crop effects on the physical and hydraulic properties of the surface layer in a loamy soil
title_sort First-year cover crop effects on the physical and hydraulic properties of the surface layer in a loamy soil
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Villarreal, Rafael
Lozano, Luis Alberto
Melani, Esteban Miguel
Polich, Nicolás Guillermo
Salazar Landea, María Paz
Bellora, Guido Lautaro
Soracco, Carlos Germán
author Villarreal, Rafael
author_facet Villarreal, Rafael
Lozano, Luis Alberto
Melani, Esteban Miguel
Polich, Nicolás Guillermo
Salazar Landea, María Paz
Bellora, Guido Lautaro
Soracco, Carlos Germán
author_role author
author2 Lozano, Luis Alberto
Melani, Esteban Miguel
Polich, Nicolás Guillermo
Salazar Landea, María Paz
Bellora, Guido Lautaro
Soracco, Carlos Germán
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Ciencias Agrarias
hydraulic conductivity
evaporation method
mini-infiltration
no-tillage
topic Ciencias Agrarias
hydraulic conductivity
evaporation method
mini-infiltration
no-tillage
dc.description.none.fl_txt_mv Soil degradation is a global problem, threating its conservation and affecting agronomic production. No-tillage (NT) is the main management system for soil conservation world-wide. However, in Argentina, simplification of the crop sequence with high proportion of soybean under NT is a very common practice, leading to soil physical constrains. Crop sequence intensification through the inclusion of cover crops has been reported as an effective tool in the long-term for the enhancement of ecosystems services, improving NT performance. The objective of this work was to follow the evolution of the structural pore domain in the surface layer during the first year after the incorporation of cover crop (cover fallow of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and vetch (Vicia sp. L.), CF), as compared with bare fallow (BF), under NT management in a field experiment located in the Argentinean Depressed Pampas Region. Mini-infiltration and evaporation experiments were conducted in undisturbed soil samples (0-5 cm depth) in the laboratory in order to determine the pore size distribution (PoSD) and hydraulic conductivity (K (h)) functions in three different dates (after cover crop seeding, after maize seeding and before maize harvest) in order to follow the changes in soil pore functioning during the first year of cover cropping management. Changes in the soil pore functioning were observed in the short-term after the first cover crop cycle, showing the time-dependence of the hydraulic soil properties. These changes were mainly observed during the maize cycle. Under CF an increment of structural porosity (PS) was observed at the end of the maize crop cycle, while during the fallow period this variable remained relatively constant. K (h) and structural porosity connectivity (Cw) showed a rapid increment under BF during the fallow period, while under CF the increase was more gradual, which could be related to pore clogging and roots decay cycles. From the obtained results, we found that the introduction of cover crops under NT promotes the increment of a secondary pore system related to structural soil porosity during the first year and enhances the unsaturated hydraulic conductivity and pore connectivity, especially at the end of the summer crop cycle. Our results highlight the importance of including cover crops into the crop rotation to improve the structural porosity and its connectivity. As well, the results show the necessity of including the short-term changes in the study of soil hydraulics properties.
Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias y Forestales
description Soil degradation is a global problem, threating its conservation and affecting agronomic production. No-tillage (NT) is the main management system for soil conservation world-wide. However, in Argentina, simplification of the crop sequence with high proportion of soybean under NT is a very common practice, leading to soil physical constrains. Crop sequence intensification through the inclusion of cover crops has been reported as an effective tool in the long-term for the enhancement of ecosystems services, improving NT performance. The objective of this work was to follow the evolution of the structural pore domain in the surface layer during the first year after the incorporation of cover crop (cover fallow of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and vetch (Vicia sp. L.), CF), as compared with bare fallow (BF), under NT management in a field experiment located in the Argentinean Depressed Pampas Region. Mini-infiltration and evaporation experiments were conducted in undisturbed soil samples (0-5 cm depth) in the laboratory in order to determine the pore size distribution (PoSD) and hydraulic conductivity (K (h)) functions in three different dates (after cover crop seeding, after maize seeding and before maize harvest) in order to follow the changes in soil pore functioning during the first year of cover cropping management. Changes in the soil pore functioning were observed in the short-term after the first cover crop cycle, showing the time-dependence of the hydraulic soil properties. These changes were mainly observed during the maize cycle. Under CF an increment of structural porosity (PS) was observed at the end of the maize crop cycle, while during the fallow period this variable remained relatively constant. K (h) and structural porosity connectivity (Cw) showed a rapid increment under BF during the fallow period, while under CF the increase was more gradual, which could be related to pore clogging and roots decay cycles. From the obtained results, we found that the introduction of cover crops under NT promotes the increment of a secondary pore system related to structural soil porosity during the first year and enhances the unsaturated hydraulic conductivity and pore connectivity, especially at the end of the summer crop cycle. Our results highlight the importance of including cover crops into the crop rotation to improve the structural porosity and its connectivity. As well, the results show the necessity of including the short-term changes in the study of soil hydraulics properties.
publishDate 2021
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2021-09
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