Stacking Agricultural Management Tactics to Promote Improvements in Soil Structure and Microbial Activities

Linking agricultural management tactics to quantifiable changes in soil health-related properties is a key objective for increasing adoption of the most favorable management practices. We used two long-term, no-till cropping studies to illustrate the variable patterns of response of soil structure i...

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Main Authors: R. Michael Lehman, Shannon L. Osborne, Kimberly McGraw
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-09-01
Series:Agronomy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/9/9/539
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spelling doaj-8fa41d273333481cb2244afe7b20cc052021-04-02T14:11:52ZengMDPI AGAgronomy2073-43952019-09-019953910.3390/agronomy9090539agronomy9090539Stacking Agricultural Management Tactics to Promote Improvements in Soil Structure and Microbial ActivitiesR. Michael Lehman0Shannon L. Osborne1Kimberly McGraw2North Central Agricultural Research Laboratory, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 2923 Medary Ave, Brookings, SD 57006, USANorth Central Agricultural Research Laboratory, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 2923 Medary Ave, Brookings, SD 57006, USAHorticulture, and Plant Science, Department of Agronomy, South Dakota State University, Brookings, SD 57007, USALinking agricultural management tactics to quantifiable changes in soil health-related properties is a key objective for increasing adoption of the most favorable management practices. We used two long-term, no-till cropping studies to illustrate the variable patterns of response of soil structure indices and microbial activity to additional management tactics, including crop rotational diversity, residue management and cover cropping. We found that observable effects of management tactics on soil properties were often dependent on the current crop phase sampled, even though the treatments were well-established. In some cases, a single additional management tactic produced a response, two tactics each produced a response and sometimes there were interactions between tactics. However, importantly, we never observed a negative effect for any of the response variables when stacking soil health building practices in no-till cropping systems. The collective results from the two field studies illustrate that soil health improvements with stacking management tactics are not always simply additive and are affected by temporal relationships inherent to the treatments. We conclude that the implementation of multiple positive management tactics increases the likelihood that improvements in soil properties can be documented with one or more of the proxy measures for soil health.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/9/9/539crop managementcrop rotationsoil healthsoil aggregationsoil microbial activity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. Michael Lehman
Shannon L. Osborne
Kimberly McGraw
spellingShingle R. Michael Lehman
Shannon L. Osborne
Kimberly McGraw
Stacking Agricultural Management Tactics to Promote Improvements in Soil Structure and Microbial Activities
Agronomy
crop management
crop rotation
soil health
soil aggregation
soil microbial activity
author_facet R. Michael Lehman
Shannon L. Osborne
Kimberly McGraw
author_sort R. Michael Lehman
title Stacking Agricultural Management Tactics to Promote Improvements in Soil Structure and Microbial Activities
title_short Stacking Agricultural Management Tactics to Promote Improvements in Soil Structure and Microbial Activities
title_full Stacking Agricultural Management Tactics to Promote Improvements in Soil Structure and Microbial Activities
title_fullStr Stacking Agricultural Management Tactics to Promote Improvements in Soil Structure and Microbial Activities
title_full_unstemmed Stacking Agricultural Management Tactics to Promote Improvements in Soil Structure and Microbial Activities
title_sort stacking agricultural management tactics to promote improvements in soil structure and microbial activities
publisher MDPI AG
series Agronomy
issn 2073-4395
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Linking agricultural management tactics to quantifiable changes in soil health-related properties is a key objective for increasing adoption of the most favorable management practices. We used two long-term, no-till cropping studies to illustrate the variable patterns of response of soil structure indices and microbial activity to additional management tactics, including crop rotational diversity, residue management and cover cropping. We found that observable effects of management tactics on soil properties were often dependent on the current crop phase sampled, even though the treatments were well-established. In some cases, a single additional management tactic produced a response, two tactics each produced a response and sometimes there were interactions between tactics. However, importantly, we never observed a negative effect for any of the response variables when stacking soil health building practices in no-till cropping systems. The collective results from the two field studies illustrate that soil health improvements with stacking management tactics are not always simply additive and are affected by temporal relationships inherent to the treatments. We conclude that the implementation of multiple positive management tactics increases the likelihood that improvements in soil properties can be documented with one or more of the proxy measures for soil health.
topic crop management
crop rotation
soil health
soil aggregation
soil microbial activity
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/9/9/539
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