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Soil organic matter in the Rothamsted plots. David Powlson Andy Macdonald, Margaret Glendining, Andy Whitmore, Kevin Coleman, Dudley Christian. Department of Soil Science, and Centre for Soils & Ecosystem Function Rothamsted Research, UK. or ….
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Soil organic matter in the Rothamsted plots David Powlson Andy Macdonald, Margaret Glendining, Andy Whitmore, Kevin Coleman, Dudley Christian Department of Soil Science, and Centre for Soils & Ecosystem Function Rothamsted Research, UK
or … Is it OK to remove straw from arable land for use as bioenergy? No …. but …. Yes …. but …..
A “perfect storm” : Food security Energy security Climate change Professor John Beddington FRS UK Government Chief Scientific Adviser
Transport Affordability Policies, …. Food security • Nutrients: • Recycling • Fertilizers Food production Management Well functioning soil Soil organic matter
Ways of maintaining SOM in arable cropping • Ley-arable farming – i.e. intermittent pasture • Add crop residues • Add manures or other organic “wastes” ………………………………………………….. • Minimise tillage • small effect, mainly redistribution • but useful to concentrate SOM near surface • Grow plants with larger root input (breeding) • Grow larger crops by using fertilizers (small effect) • Utilise “black carbon” or biochar?
So appropriate to be cautious about residue removal But …. • 50% of above-ground residues returned to soil in stubble + chaff (winter wheat, UK conditions) • 1.9 t C/ha returned (stubble, chaff, roots, exudates) even when straw is removed (calculated from Broadbalk data)
Total SOM content changes between different equilibrium levels …. slowly Long term experiments – Valuable to quantify changes caused by different managements Increase inputs (or slow down decomposition) Final Equilibrium Soil C Content In practice (non-experimental situations) – Equilibrium rarely achieved; one management change superimposed on another Transition Initial Equilibrium Time
Broadbalk • Winter wheat • (continuous & rotation) • Started 1843
Straw incorporated in one section since ???? • But this section also has higher clay content than rest of field • Difficult to resolve effects
Even if changes in total SOC are small/slow, changes in specific fractions may be occurring.
Straw incorporation experiment, Denmark (18 years, spring barley) 40% increase in microbial biomass No measurable effect on soil total C or N Powlson et al (1987) Soil Biology & Biochemistry18, 159-164
Can a small change in SOM have large effects on soil properties?
Draught Forces & Energy Strain gauged frame (to measure draught forces) Doppler radar sensor (forward speed) Laser proximity sensors (depth & front furrow width) Draught Force
Broadbalk • Winter wheat • (continuous & rotation) • Started 1843
Specific draught measurements; Broadbalk Experiment, Rothamsted Watts, Clark, Poulton, Powlson, Whitmore. Soil Use and Management22,334-341 (2006)
Broadbalk – SOC and specific draught Watts, Clark, Poulton, Powlson, Whitmore. Soil Use and Management 22,334-341 (2006)
“Labile C” – easily oxidisable – about 10% of total C (microbial biomass + metabolites) • Increased by straw incorporation and N fertilizer application (larger yields, larger residue returns) • “Labile C” – correlated with: • Increased aggregate stability • Increased water infiltration rate Blair, Faulkner, Till, Poulton. Soil & Tillage Research91, 30-38 (2006)
Rothamsted, Broadbalk Experiment Labile C Total C Water infiltration rate related to “labile C” – increased by straw and N fertilizer Blair, Faulkner, Till, Poulton. Soil & Tillage Research91, 30-38 (2006)
Rothamsted, Broadbalk Experiment Labile C Total C Aggregate stability related to “labile C” – increased by straw and N fertilizer Blair, Faulkner, Till, Poulton. Soil & Tillage Research91, 30-38 (2006)
ESRC transdisciplinary seminar, 20th April 2004 The benefits of SOM may not be directly proportional to total SOC content Arable 45t C ha-1 Bare fallow 40t C ha-1 Managed grass 80t C ha-1
Concluding comments • Maintaining SOC content is vital for soil functioning (“soil quality”) • So unwise to regularly remove crop residues – one of few ways to add OM • But considerable OM inputs from roots, stubble, chaff – these continue even if straw removed • A suggestion – only remove straw every 2nd or 3rd year
Concluding comments • Maintaining SOC is essential for soil functioning (“soil quality”) • Crop production • Run-off, erosion • So unwise to regularly remove crop residues – one of few ways to add OM to soil • But considerable OM inputs from roots, stubble, chaff – these continue even if straw is removed • A suggestion: only remove straw every 2nd or 3rd year • Region specific modelling can provide guidance • Implications for straw availability for biofuel • But care – small SOC changes may have disproportionately large impacts on soil (physical) properties
Sanguesa, Spain 200 GWhr/yr Uses 160,000 t cereal straw per year Electricity for 50,000 homes