No-till is challenged: Complementary management is crucial to improve its environmental benefits under a changing climate

Stefani Daryanto , Lixin Wang , Pierre-André Jacinthe

Geography and Sustainability ›› 2020, Vol. 1 ›› Issue (3) : 229 -232.

PDF
Geography and Sustainability ›› 2020, Vol. 1 ›› Issue (3) :229 -232. DOI: 10.1016/j.geosus.2020.09.003
Prespective
research-article

No-till is challenged: Complementary management is crucial to improve its environmental benefits under a changing climate

Author information +
History +
PDF

Abstract

Tillage is the most common agricultural practice dating back to the origin of agriculture. In recent decades, no-tillage (NT) has been introduced to improve soil and water quality. However, changes in soil properties resulting from long-term NT can increase losses of dissolved phosphorus, nitrate and some classes of pesticides, and NT effect on nitrous oxide (N2O) emission remains controversial. Complementary management that enhances the overall environmental benefits of NT is therefore crucial. By incorporating cover crops, nutrient cycling and nutrient use efficiency in NT fields could be improved given the nutrient supplying capacity of some cover crops. Cover crops could also offset the need for occasional tillage of NT cropland, an operation whose effect is only temporary in reducing, for example, soil compaction associated with NT management. When used in combination with NT, cover crop termination methods, using agrochemicals, should be carefully considered to prevent further jeopardy to water quality. Compared to herbicides, the use of roller crimping could potentially result in production cost saving while minimizing soil disturbance and export of agrochemicals. Future research should focus on various combinations of cover crop traits (e.g., decomposition rate) and management (e.g., timing of cover crop termination) that account for siteand cash crop-specific requirements.

Keywords

Ecosystem service / Cover crop / Leaching / Runoff

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Stefani Daryanto, Lixin Wang, Pierre-André Jacinthe. No-till is challenged: Complementary management is crucial to improve its environmental benefits under a changing climate. Geography and Sustainability, 2020, 1(3): 229-232 DOI:10.1016/j.geosus.2020.09.003

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

Declaration of Competing Interest

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by a grant (No. 2014-51130-22492) from the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA/USDA).

References

[1]

Almeida, D., Rocha, K., de Souza, M., Delaia, L., Rosolem, C., 2018. Soil phosphorus bioavailability and soybean grain yield impaired by ruzigrass. Agron. J. 110, 654-663.

[2]

Basche, A., Archontoulis, S., Kaspar, T., Jaynes, D., Parkin, T., Miguez, F., 2016. Simulating long-term impacts of cover crops and climate change on crop production and environmental outcomes in the Midwestern United States. Agric. Ecosyst. Environ. 218, 95-106.

[3]

Berghuijs, W., Woods, R., Hrachowitz, M., 2014. A precipitation shift from snow towards rain leads to a decrease in streamflow. Nat. Clim. Change 4 (7), 583-586.

[4]

Brennan, E., 2017. Can we grow organic or conventional vegetables sustainably without cover crops? Hortechnology 27 (2), 151-161.

[5]

Casão Jr, R., de Araujo, A., Llanillo, R., 2012. No-till Agriculture in Southern Brazil: Factors that Facilitated the Evolution of the System and the Development of the Mechanization of Conservation Farming. The Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations and Instituto Agronomico do Paraná.

[6]

Cassigneul, A., Alletto, L., Benoit, P., Bergheaud, V., Etiévant, V., Dumény, V., Le Gac, A., Chuette, D., Rumpel, C., Justes, E., 2015. Nature and decomposition degree of cover crops influence pesticide sorption: Quantification and modelling. Chemosphere 119, 1007-1014.

[7]

Chen, G., Weil, R., 2010. Penetration of cover crop roots through compacted soils. Plant Soil 331 (1-2), 31-43.

[8]

Claassen, R., Bowman, M., McFadden, J., Smith, D., Wallander, S., 2018. Tillage Intensity and Conservation Cropping in the United States. Economic Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture Economic Information Bulletin 197.

[9]

Couedel, A., Alletto, L., Tribouillois, H., Justes, E., 2018. Cover crop crucifer-legume mixtures provide effective nitrate catch crop and nitrogen green manure ecosystem services. Agric. Ecosyst. Environ. 254, 50-59.

[10]

Daryanto, S., Fu, B., Wang, L., Jacinthe, P., Zhao, W., 2018. Quantitative synthesis on the ecosystem services of cover crops. Earth Sci. Rev. 185, 357-373.

[11]

Daryanto, S., Jacinthe, P., Fu, B., Zhao, W., Wang, L., 2019. Valuing the ecosystem services of cover crops: Barriers and pathways forward. Agric. Ecosyst. Environ. 270-271, 76-78.

[12]

Daryanto, S., Wang, L., Jacinthe, P., 2017a. Impacts of no-tillage management on nitrate loss from corn, soybean and wheat cultivation: A meta-analysis. Sci. Rep. 7 (1), 1-9.

[13]

Daryanto, S., Wang, L., Jacinthe, P., 2017b. Meta-analysis of phosphorus loss from no-till soils. J. Environ. Qual. 46 (5), 1028-1037.

[14]

Davis, A., 2010. Cover-crop roller-crimper contributes to weed management in no-till soybean. Weed Sci. 58 (3), 300-309.

[15]

Elias, D., Wang, L., Jacinthe, P., 2018. A meta-analysis of pesticide loss in runoffunder conventional tillage and no-till management. Environ. Monitor. Assess. 190 (2), 79.

[16]

Fiorini, A., Maris, S., Abalos, D., Amaducci, S., Tabaglio, V., 2020. Combining no-till with rye (Secale cereale L.) cover crop mitigates nitrous oxide emissions without decreasing yield. Soil Till. Res. 196, 104442.

[17]

Frasconi, C., Martelloni, L., Antichi, D., Raffaelli, M., Fontanelli, M., Peruzzi, A., Benincasa, P., Tosti, G., 2019. Combining roller crimpers and flaming for the termination of cover crops in herbicide-free no-till cropping systems. PLoS One 14 (2), e0211573.

[18]

Frasier, I., Noellemeyer, I., Amiotti, N., Quiroga, A., 2017. Vetch-rye biculture is a sustainable alternative for enhanced nitrogen availability and low leaching losses in a no-till cover crop system. Field Crop Res. 214, 104-112.

[19]

Furlan, L., Vasileiadis, V., Chiarini, F., Huiting, H., Leskovsek, R., Razinger, J., Holb, I., Sartori, E., Urek, G., Verschwele, A., Benvegnu, I., Sattin, M., 2017. Risk assessment of soil-pest damage to grain maize in Europe within the framework of integrated pest management. Crop Prot. 97 (SI), 52-59.

[20]

Gelfand, I., Shcherbak, I., Millar, N., Kravchenko, A., Robertson, G., 2016. Long-term nitrous oxide fluxes in annual and perennial agricultural and unmanaged ecosystems in the upper Midwest USA. Glob. Change Biol. 22 (11), 3594-3607.

[21]

Huang, Y., Ren, W., Wang, L., Hui, D., Grove, J., Yang, X., Tao, B., Goff, B., 2018. Greenhouse gas emissions and crop yield in no-tillage systems: A meta-analysis. Agric. Ecosyst. Environ. 268, 144-153.

[22]

Jiao, W., Tian, C., Chang, Q., Novick, K., Wang, L., 2019. A new multi-sensor integrated index for drought monitoring. Agric. Forest Meteorol. 268, 74-85.

[23]

Knapp, A., Avolio, M., Beier, C., Carroll, C., Collins, S., Dukes, J., Fraser, L., Griffin-Nolan, R., Hoover, D., Jentsch, A., 2017. Pushing precipitation to the extremes in distributed experiments: Recommendations for simulating wet and dry years. Glob. Change Biol. 23 (5), 1774-1782.

[24]

Kristensen, H., Thorup-Kristensen, K., 2004. Root growth and nitrate uptake of three different catch crops in deep soil layers. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 68 (2), 529-537.

[25]

Ladan, S., Jacinthe, P., 2017. Nitrogen availability and early corn growth on plowed and no-till soils amended with different types of cover crops. J. Soil Sci. Plant Nutr. 17 (1), 74-90.

[26]

Lal, R., 1974. No-tillage effects on soil properties and maize ( Zea mays L. ) production in Western Nigeria. Plant Soil 40 (2), 321-331.

[27]

Maltais-Landry, G., Frossard, E., 2015. Similar phosphorus transfer from cover crop residues and water-soluble mineral fertilizer to soils and a subsequent crop. Plant Soil 393 (1-2), 193-205.

[28]

Millar, N., Robertson, G., Grace, P., Gehl, R., Hoben, J., 2010. Nitrogen fertilizer management for nitrous oxide (N2O) mitigation in intensive corn (Maize) production: An emissions reduction protocol for US Midwest agriculture. Mitig. Adapt. Strat. Glob. 15 (2), 185-204.

[29]

Navarro-Miró, D., Caballero-López, B., Blanco-Moreno, J., Pérez, A., Depalo, L., Masetti, A., Burgio, G., Canali, S., Xavier, F., 2017. Agro-ecological service crops with roller crimper termination enhance ground-dwelling predator communities and pest regulation. Innovative Research for Organic 3.0, 19th Organic World Congress.

[30]

Necpalova, M., Lee, J., Skinner, C., Büchi, L., Wittwer, R., Gattinger, A., van der Heijden, M., Mäder, P., Charles, R., Berner, A., Mayerd, J., Six, J., 2018. Potentials to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions from Swiss agriculture. Agric. Ecosyst. Environ. 265, 84-102.

[31]

Pickett, J., Woodcock, C., OMidega, C., Khan, Z., 2014. Push-pull farming systems. Curr. Opin. Biotechnol. 26, 125-132.

[32]

Reay, D., Davidson, E., Smith, K., Smith, P., Melillo, J., Dentener, F., Crutzen, P., 2012. Global agriculture and nitrous oxide emissions. Nat. Clim. Change 2, 410-416.

[33]

SARE, 2017. Annual report 2016-2017 cover crop survey September 2017. Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education.

[34]

Silva, E., Moore, V., 2017. Cover crops as an agroecological practice on organic vegetable farms in Wisconsin, USA. Sustainability 9 (1), 55.

[35]

Smith, A., Jacinthe, P., 2014. A mesocosm study of the effects of wet-dry cycles on nutrient release from constructed wetlands in agricultural landscapes. Environ. Sci. Process Impacts 16 (1), 106-115.

[36]

Travlos, I., Kontopoulou, C., Kanatas, P., Panagopoulou, M., Bilalis, D., 2017. Cover crops against herbicide-resistant invasive weeds. Sci. Pap.-Ser. A-Agron. 60, 425-429.

[37]

Triplett, G., Dick, W., 2008. No-tillage crop production: A revolution in agriculture!. Agron. J. 100 (3), S153-S165 S-153-S-165.

[38]

Turner, P., Griffis, T., Lee, X., Baker, J., Venterea, R., Wood, J., 2015. Indirect nitrous oxide emissions from streams within the US Corn Belt scale with stream order. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 112 (32), 9839-9843.

[39]

Valkama, E., Lemola, R., Kankanen, H., Turtola, E., 2015. Meta-analysis of the effects of undersown catch crops on nitrogen leaching loss and grain yields in the Nordic countries. Agric. Ecosyst. Environ. 203, 93-101.

[40]

Wen, L., Lee-Marzano, S., Ortiz-Ribbing, L.M., Gruver, J., Hartman, G.L., Eastburn, D.M., 2017. Suppression of soilborne diseases of soybean with cover crops. Plant Dis. 101, 1918-1928.

[41]

UNEP/FAO, 2020. The UN decade on ecosystem restoration 2021-2030. In: https://www.decadeonrestoration.org/(Ed.) (accessed 5 September 2020).

PDF

26

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

/