Track 2-11: Plant Nutrition and Nutrient Cycling

Description

Increased demand for food and bioenergy crops and the subsequent intensification of crop production creates a challenge for the conservation of natural resources in Latin America and the world. In Uruguay, no-till cash-crop production area has increased from 0.4 to 1.5 million ha in the last decade (DIEA 2011) mostly at the expense of pastureland through expanding grain production to soils with lower land use capability. Production systems based on crop-pasture rotations shifted to a longer annual cropping phase with a shorter pasture phase, or to continuous annual crop-ping. Long-term experiments in the country have shown that the rotation of annual crops and perennial pastures minimizes soil erosion in tilled systems, maintaining a positive long-term soil carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) balance that contrasts with C and N losses in annual cropping systems (García-Préchac et al. 2004). Research and extension on soil conservation in crop-pasture systems have led to a massive adoption of no-tillage practices, reaching about 90% of cash crop area by the 2009 growing season (DIEA 2011). However, the gradual increase in no-till adoption by farm operators has been associated with a dramatic increase in continuous annual cropping to the detriment of the pasture phase of the rotation.

Our overarching question is: What is the impact of an increased frequency of annual crops in the C and N cycling of these systems? The objective of this study was to assess the impact of the pasture phase and cropping intensity on the soil C and N cycling of an Oxyaquic Argiudoll soil of eastern Uruguay using long term field experimental data and a cropping systems simulation model.

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Soil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics of Integrated Crop-Pasture Systems with Annual and Perennial Forages

Increased demand for food and bioenergy crops and the subsequent intensification of crop production creates a challenge for the conservation of natural resources in Latin America and the world. In Uruguay, no-till cash-crop production area has increased from 0.4 to 1.5 million ha in the last decade (DIEA 2011) mostly at the expense of pastureland through expanding grain production to soils with lower land use capability. Production systems based on crop-pasture rotations shifted to a longer annual cropping phase with a shorter pasture phase, or to continuous annual crop-ping. Long-term experiments in the country have shown that the rotation of annual crops and perennial pastures minimizes soil erosion in tilled systems, maintaining a positive long-term soil carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) balance that contrasts with C and N losses in annual cropping systems (García-Préchac et al. 2004). Research and extension on soil conservation in crop-pasture systems have led to a massive adoption of no-tillage practices, reaching about 90% of cash crop area by the 2009 growing season (DIEA 2011). However, the gradual increase in no-till adoption by farm operators has been associated with a dramatic increase in continuous annual cropping to the detriment of the pasture phase of the rotation.

Our overarching question is: What is the impact of an increased frequency of annual crops in the C and N cycling of these systems? The objective of this study was to assess the impact of the pasture phase and cropping intensity on the soil C and N cycling of an Oxyaquic Argiudoll soil of eastern Uruguay using long term field experimental data and a cropping systems simulation model.