Tillage can incorporate soil amendments such as fertilizers; bury weed seeds and crop residues that may harbor diseases and insects; remove residue that insulates the soil and promotes soil warming and crop seed germination and growth. Tillage can also cause soil erosion, disrupt soil organisms and soil structure; and remove residues that slow water run-off and evaporation, conserving soil moisture. Conservation tillage practices can reduce or eliminate the need for tillage, and the integration of perennials and cover crops can also protect soil from erosion and contribute to improving soil quality. In Module 7.2, we explore tillage and cropping practices that farmers can employ and integrate to conserve and improve their soil for long-term farm productivity.
In addition to exposing soil to wind and water erosion, tillage can alter the physical structure, distribution of organic matter, and biological activity of soil. At the depth where the plow impacts the soil, a layer of soil compaction can develop (a plow pan), limiting water infiltration and plant rooting depth. Under tillage, crop residues, roots and root hairs, and their associated fungal hyphae are disturbed and more decomposed in the plow layer. By contrast, when roots, fine roots, and fungal hyphae are not disturbed and decomposed as rapidly, there are more channels that water, air, earthworms, and roots can move through, and soil aggregation is enhanced. Below is a schematic comparing the root zone profile of a conventionally tilled soil to a no-till soil.
Watch the three videos below, from USDA NRCS about soil tillage and soil health.
Humans have developed many different ways to prepare the soil to plant crops, with the primary goal of achieving good seed to soil contact to keep seeds moist as they germinate and grow. There are some benefits of tillage. For instance, tillage enables the farmer to bury or mix-in crop residues that insulate the soil and keep it moist and cool which can delay crop seed germination in cool environments. By burying the insulating crop residues, solar radiation can warm the soil more quickly. Tillage can also terminate weeds, cover crops or perennials, and bury weed seeds and crop residues that may harbor pathogens and insect seeds; tillage also mixes in soil amendments, such as fertilizer and animal manures.
In conventional tillage systems, primary tillage equipment such as the moldboard plow or a rototiller inverts the soil. A second tillage event or plow is often used afterward to break up large soil clods into smaller particles, with the goal of improving seed to soil contact. See photos below.
Removing or mixing-in crop residue leaves the soil exposed and prone to wind and water erosion, as well as soil moisture loss. Tilling crop residue into the soil also makes residues more accessible to soil organisms and incorporates oxygen into the soil, increasing the decomposition rate of the residues and decreasing organic matter content at the soil surface and plow layers. Tillage also disrupts soil organisms, particularly mycorrhizal fungi, and soil physical properties such as water stable aggregates.
Conservation tillage or minimum tillage is another soil preparation method designed to reduce soil erosion by reducing disturbance and leaving some plant residue (at least 30%) on the surface. The soil is not inverted, but the surface is disturbed and often a high proportion of crop residues are mixed in with tillage equipment such as a disk plow or a chisel plow.
No-till or Direct-seeding is designed to eliminate tillage, by cutting a slit in the surface and placing the seed in the slit. In addition to minimizing crop residue disturbance, the crop is planted in one pass across the field, thereby reducing erosion, labor, and fuel needed to prepare a field and plant the crop.
Some hurdles to no-till adoption As discussed earlier, there are a number of reasons that farmers till the soil. For instance, conventional tillage can terminate perennials, cover crops, and weeds prior to planting the subsequent crop. Without conventional tillage, farmers typically use herbicides to terminate the previous perennial or cover crop and control weeds. In cool environments, crop residues can harbor pathogen and insect pests, and insulate soil, which can slow soil warming in spring and delay crop emergence. These factors can reduce crop yield, particularly if farmers don't rotate crops to interrupt pest life cycles. In addition, although farmers typically need less tillage equipment to plant with no-till, there is an initial cost associated with purchasing no-till equipment for farmers who use conventional or conservation tillage equipment. And with new equipment, farmers need to learn how to adjust no-till planters to ensure that seed is planted at the optimal depth. Consequently, no-till planters are typically heavier to cut through crop residues and place seeds at a sufficient depth for good seed to soil contact.
Zone or strip tillage When soils have high crop residue and/or are high in organic matter, or are not well-drained, soils can remain cool and delay seed germination. Zone tillage or strip tillage incorporates the insulating crop residue in a narrow zone or strip of soil where the seed is placed. Residue between the seed planting zones is not disturbed or removed. Removing the soil insulating layer increases the rate of soil drying and warming in close proximity to the seed, promoting earlier seed germination compared to soil with residue left intact.
Read more about tillage and how it impacts soil, in Chapter 16 (Reducing Tillage) of Building Soils for Better Crops [1].
As discussed in Module 5, perennials provide year-round live plant cover that protects soil from erosion; and their live and large root systems support rhizosphere activity and return organic matter to the soil all year. To provide continuous live roots for soil conservation and soil health, perennial crops can be rotated with annual crops, and double crops and cover crops can be integrated into annual cropping systems. Recall that in Module 7.1, a dairy crop rotation of corn-alfalfa was shown in Fig. 7.1.3b, and double cropping in Fig.7.1.4. The photos below also illustrate examples of how year-round cropping provides multiple agroecosystem benefits.
In addition, consider how managing crops and soils for soil conservation and health can enhance agricultural resilience and adaption to climate change. For instance, by increasing soil organic matter content, agricultural soil can: i. contribute to carbon sequestration (removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and storing it in soil), ii. improve soil structure and porosity and enhance water infiltration and water content in soil, and iii. store and cycle nutrients. Perennial crop production and double-cropping can utilize potentially longer growing seasons; provide more year-round protection of soil from erosion, and planting and harvesting crops at multiple times of the year can reduce the risk of extreme weather events or irregular weather interfering with cropping activities.
For more discussion of a crop-soil system management approach, watch the three short videos below from NRCS about the benefits of cover crops on soil health.
Describe two or three practices that are components of the conservation system or agroecological approach of soil conservation and health.
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Go to the FAO UN website and read their brief description of Conservation Agriculture. Then watch the short video “Conservation Agriculture in Southern Brazil [5]” (4:41).
Describe the soil and crop management practices that the video about Conservation Agriculture describes that promote soil quality and crop productivity.
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In Brazil, what were some of the ecological benefits of conservation agriculture?
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In Brazil, what were some of the socio-economic benefits of conservation agriculture?
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Links
[1] https://www.sare.org/Learning-Center/Books/Building-Soils-for-Better-Crops-3rd-Edition/Text-Version
[2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVf2yF19tx8
[3] https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=6&v=Qjd0NQ6Hc88
[4] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ohX1jIlH_kI
[5] http://www.fao.org/ag/ca/
[6] https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtu8MkufmVgxS8_Ocl7mMig