Effects of soil tillage and mulching on thermal performance of a Luvisol topsoil layer
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Institute of Forest Ecology Slovak Academy of Sciences
Abstract
Important energy exchanges at soil surface
regulate the thermal environment within top soil layer and the boundary layer above it. By this reason, the application of mulches or the modelling of micro relief by soil tillage are common practises to modify the thermal regime of a soil.
The aim of this study is to compare the effect on thermal behaviour of a Luvisol resulting of soil tillage and the application of stubble mulch and, different amounts of straw mulch. For this purpose, experiments were performed from January to May 2007 in a field sowed with winter wheat.
Temperatures were measured with copper-constantan (Type T) thermocouples placed over straw and over stubble, at soil surface and at 2, 4 and 8 cm depth. Temperatures above canopy were also recorded.
Daily mean temperatures and temperature
amplitudes in the top soil layer covered by straw mulch were smaller than those verified either by stubble mulch or with soil tillage. Daily minimum temperatures in mobilized plots or
covered by stubble mulch were smaller than those verified in plots covered by straw mulch, therefore being the former treatments more susceptible to frost than the later ones.
Thermal differences between the four plots decreased significantly with wheat growth. Implications of these techniques of soil temperature control for crop growth are
also discussed.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Andrade, J. A., Alexandre, C. A., & Basch, G. (2010): Effects of soil tillage and mulching on thermal performance of a Luvisol topsoil layer. Foliae Oecologicae 37(1): 1-7.