Quantifying soil water conservation in the semiarid region of Saskatchewan, Canada: Effect of fallow frequency and N fertilizer

2008 ◽  
Vol 88 (4) ◽  
pp. 461-475 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. De Jong ◽  
C A Campbell ◽  
R P Zentner ◽  
P. Basnyat ◽  
H. Cutforth ◽  
...  

Soil water is the most limiting factor influencing crop production in the semiarid prairies. The effects of fallow frequency and nitrogen (N) fertilization on soil water conservation were quantified for a 40-yr (1967–2006) field experiment conducted on a medium textured Orthic Brown Chernozem (aridic haploboroll) in semiarid southwestern Saskatchewan, in which soil water contents were measured each year in early spring (generally a week prior to seeding), shortly after harvest, and again just prior to freeze-up in the fall. The three treatments examined were continuous spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) (Cont W) and fallow-wheat (F-W), each receiving recommended rates of N and P fertilizer, and Cont W receiving only P. On average, 36% of the precipitation received during the fall and winter months for Cont W (N + P) was conserved in the soil. In the summer fallow system [F-W (N + P)] a greater proportion (42%) of the precipitation was conserved during the first fall and winter. Despite the fact that cumulative precipitation from spring to late fall during the fallow period averaged 243 mm, compared with 152 mm received during the previous fall and winter period, the amount (31 mm) and proportion (13%) of precipitation conserved was considerably less than that during the first overwinter period. These differences were attributed mainly to much higher summer evaporative losses. During the second overwinter period, only 6% of the precipitation received was conserved in the F-W (N + P) system compared with 44% in the first overwinter period. This poor conservation during the second winter was thought to be related to increased snow blowoff due to smaller amounts of standing crop residues, and to the freezing of a wet and bare soil surface, restricting water entry during snowmelt or spring thaw events. Physical based soil-crop models, which must be first improved for overwinter simulations, should be tested on the current data set to further interpret the observations and hypotheses. Compared with the 36% of fall and winter precipitation conserved in Cont W (N + P), inadequate N fertility [Cont W (+ P)] resulted in only 27% of the precipitation being conserved during this period. At harvest, F-W (N + P) and Cont W (N + P) had similar amounts of water in the soil, but Cont W (+ P) had significantly (P < 0.05) more because of reduced water use. However, by the following spring soil water recharge being proportional to crop residues produced resulted in F-W (N + P), Cont W (N + P) and Cont W (+ P) having 252, 209 and 204 mm/1.2 m soil, respectively. Equations were developed that will allow estimation of water conserved as a function of precipitation received between harvest and seeding for F-W (N + P) and Cont W (N + P) (R2 = 0.52*** in each case). Trends in grain yield were fairly closely correlated with growing season precipitation and potential evapotranspiration [squared semipartial correlation coefficients for Cont W (N + P) 0.32 and 0.17, respectively, and for F-W (N + P) 0.35 and 0.12]; soil water conservation played a minor role in determining final grain yields (squared semipartial correlation coefficient < 0.08). Key words: Soil water, spring wheat, precipitation deficit, yield trends, water conserved trends

1992 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. P. Lafond ◽  
Heather Loeppky ◽  
D. A. Derksen

The long-term productivity of soils in Western Canada can be maintained, even enhanced, providing changes in production practices occur to reverse the current trends of soil degradation. A study was initiated in 1986 to investigate the interactions of tillage systems and crop rotations on soil water conservation, seedling establishment and crop yields. The three tillage systems used were zero (ZT), minimum (one preseeding tillage operation) (MT) and conventional tillage (fall and spring preseeding tillage operations) (CT). Three 4-yr crop rotations were superimposed on the three tillage systems: fallow-spring wheat-spring wheat-winter wheat, spring wheat-spring wheat-flax-winter wheat and spring wheat-flax-winter wheat-field pea. The amount of water conserved during the fallow period was not significantly affected by tillage systems. Under stubble cropping, ZT and MT increased soil water in the 0- to 60-cm soil layer by 9% and in the 0- to 120-cm soil layer by 6% over CT. When spring soil moisture under stubble in the 0- to 120-cm soil layer was expressed as a percentage of a saturated soil profile, ZT and MT averaged 87% and CT, 82%. Seedling populations in spring wheat and field pea were not affected by tillage systems while flax seedling populations were 8% less under ZT and MT than CT. The rate of plant establishment for spring wheat was not affected by tillage systems. Yields of spring wheat, flax and field pea under ZT and MT were increased by 21, 23 and 9% over CT, respectively. Crop production practices that minimize soil degradation by maximizing the benefits of surface residues and standing stubble can successfully be adopted.Key words: Pisum sativum L., Linum usitatissimum L., Triticum aestivum L., stubble cropping, fallow cropping, crop rotation


1995 ◽  
Vol 75 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. Blackshaw ◽  
C. W. Lindwall

Fallow continues to be a common agronomic practice on the southern Canadian prairies, but it has been associated with increased soil erosion and salinity and declining soil fertility. Field experiments were conducted at Lethbridge, Alberta, from 1987 to 1992 to determine the effects of various fallow treatments on weed control, conservation of surface crop residues, accumulation of soil water, and succeeding spring and winter wheat yields. Conventional cultivation during the fallow year with 168-cm sweeps controlled most spring-germinating weeds but did not adequately control overwintered flix-weed or downy brome. Repeated applications of glyphosate and 2,4-D effectively controlled most weeds. Paraquat did not control wild buckwheat or dandelion. Glyphosate alone often did not control wild buckwheat or Russian thistle. Treatments involving a combination of herbicides and tillage gave the best control of all weed species. Although not as effective in conserving surface crop residues as sole use of herbicides, many of the combined herbicide-tillage treatments maintained sufficient crop residue to keep the risk of soil erosion low. Soil water accumulation and succeeding wheat yields with the combined herbicide-tillage treatments were similar to, or greater than, those attained with repeated herbicides or repeated tillage. Management systems combining herbicides and tillage for fallow weed control may reduce costs and prevent or retard the development of herbicide resistance. Key words: Water conservation, herbicides, reduced tillage, soil erosion, stubble retention, weed control, wheat yield, no-till


2015 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 70-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caley K. Gasch ◽  
Tomislav Hengl ◽  
Benedikt Gräler ◽  
Hanna Meyer ◽  
Troy S. Magney ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Balota ◽  
Steve McGrath ◽  
Thomas G. Isleib ◽  
Shyam Tallury

Abstract Water deficit, i.e., rainfall amounts and distribution, is the most common abiotic stress that limits peanut production worldwide. Even though extensive research efforts have been made to improve drought tolerance in peanut, performance of genotypes largely depends upon the environment in which they grow. Based on greenhouse experiments, it has been hypothesized that stomata closure under high vapor pressure deficit (VPD) is a mechanism of soil water conservation and it has been shown that genotypic variation for the response of transpiration rate to VPD in peanut exists. The objective of this study was to determine the relationship between stomatal conductance (gs) and VPD for field grown peanut in Virginia-Carolina (VC) rainfed environments. In 2009, thirty virginia-type peanut cultivars and advanced breeding lines were evaluated for gs at several times before and after rain events, including a moisture stress episode. In 2010, eighteen genotypes were evaluated for gs under soil water deficit. In 2009, VPD ranged from 1.3 to 4.2 kPa and in 2010 from 1.78 to 3.57 kPa. Under water deficit, genotype and year showed a significant effect on gs (P  =  0.0001), but the genotype × year interaction did not. During the water deficit episodes while recorded gs values were relatively high, gs was negatively related to VPD (R2  =  0.57, n  =  180 in 2009; R2  =  0.47, n  =  108 in 2010), suggesting that stomata closure is indeed a water conservation mechanism for field grown peanut. However, a wide range of slopes among genotype were observed in both years. Genotypes with significant negative relationships of gs and VPD under water deficit in both years were Florida Fancy, Gregory, N04074FCT, NC-V11, and VA-98R. While Florida Fancy, Gregory, and NC-V11 are known to be high yielding cultivars, VA-98R and line N04074FCT are not. The benefit of stomatal closure during drought episodes in the VC environments is further discussed in this paper.


2008 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 1323-1337 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Albergel ◽  
C. Rüdiger ◽  
T. Pellarin ◽  
J.-C. Calvet ◽  
N. Fritz ◽  
...  

Abstract. A long term data acquisition effort of profile soil moisture is under way in southwestern France at 13 automated weather stations. This ground network was developed in order to validate remote sensing and model soil moisture estimates. In this paper, both those in situ observations and a synthetic data set covering continental France are used to test a simple method to retrieve root zone soil moisture from a time series of surface soil moisture information. A recursive exponential filter equation using a time constant, T, is used to compute a soil water index. The Nash and Sutcliff coefficient is used as a criterion to optimise the T parameter for each ground station and for each model pixel of the synthetic data set. In general, the soil water indices derived from the surface soil moisture observations and simulations agree well with the reference root-zone soil moisture. Overall, the results show the potential of the exponential filter equation and of its recursive formulation to derive a soil water index from surface soil moisture estimates. This paper further investigates the correlation of the time scale parameter T with soil properties and climate conditions. While no significant relationship could be determined between T and the main soil properties (clay and sand fractions, bulk density and organic matter content), the modelled spatial variability and the observed inter-annual variability of T suggest that a weak climate effect may exist.


2009 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 4265-4306 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Verbist ◽  
W. M. Cornelis ◽  
D. Gabriels ◽  
K. Alaerts ◽  
G. Soto

Abstract. In arid and semi-arid zones runoff harvesting techniques are often applied to increase the water retention and infiltration on steep slopes. Additionally, they act as an erosion control measure to reduce land degradation hazards. Nevertheless, few efforts were observed to quantify the water harvesting processes of these techniques and to evaluate their efficiency. In this study a combination of detailed field measurements and modelling with the HYDRUS-2D software package was used to visualize the effect of an infiltration trench on the soil water content of a bare slope in Northern Chile. Rainfall simulations were combined with high spatial and temporal resolution water content monitoring in order to construct a useful dataset for inverse modelling purposes. Initial estimates of model parameters were provided by detailed infiltration and soil water retention measurements. Four different measurement techniques were used to determine the saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ksat) independently. Tension infiltrometer measurements proved a good estimator of the Ksat value and a proxy for those measured under simulated rainfall, whereas the pressure and constant head well infiltrometer measurements showed larger variability. Six different parameter optimization functions were tested as a combination of soil-water content, water retention and cumulative infiltration data. Infiltration data alone proved insufficient to obtain high model accuracy, due to large scatter on the data set, and water content data were needed to obtain optimized effective parameter sets with small confidence intervals. Correlation between observed soil water content and simulated values was as high as R2=0.93 for ten selected observation points used in the model calibration phase, with overall correlation for the 22 observation points equal to 0.85. Model results indicate that the infiltration trench has a significant effect on soil water storage, especially at the base of the trench.


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