Wettability of soil aggregates from cultivated and uncultivated Ustolls and Usterts

被引:30
|
作者
Eynard, A
Schumacher, TE
Lindstrom, MJ
Malo, DD
Kohl, RA
机构
[1] S Dakota State Univ, Dept Plant Sci, Brookings, SD 57007 USA
[2] ARS, USDA, Morris, MN 56267 USA
来源
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF SOIL RESEARCH | 2004年 / 42卷 / 02期
关键词
management systems; organic C;
D O I
10.1071/SR03029
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
Soil organic matter can modify the interaction of clay minerals with water, limiting the rate of water intake of swelling clays and stabilising soil aggregates. Soil structural stability and organic C content usually decrease with cultivation. Faster wetting increases stresses on aggregates and decreases stability. Aggregate wettabilities of prairie soils under 3 different management systems (grassland, no-till, and conventional-till) were compared in the Northern Great Plains of the USA. Six Ustolls and 2 Usterts were selected as replications along the Missouri River. Wettability was measured as water drop penetration time (WDPT) and as rate of water intake under 30 and 300 mm tension. At low tension, aggregates from both cultivated fields and uncultivated grasslands showed similar wettability. Water intake in grass aggregates was attributed to a greater amount of stable pores relative to cultivated aggregates. In cultivated aggregates, slaking created planes of failure that allowed rapid water entry. Differences of wettability between management systems at 300 mm tension (in Ustolls, grasslands had greater wettability than cultivated soils, 0.24 v. 0.17 g water/h.g dry soil) and between soil orders (Usterts had longer WDPT than Ustolls, 2.9 v. 1.7 s) were explained by both clay and organic C contents. Simple measurements of aggregate wettability may be effectively used for soil quality characterisation. Aggregate wettability is a desirable property for agricultural soils when it is related to stable porosity, as may be found in high organic matter soils (e. g. grasslands). Wettability is excessive when fast aggregate wetting results in aggregate destruction as observed in low organic matter cultivated soils.
引用
收藏
页码:163 / 170
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Assessment of the effects of physical-chemical parameters on 210Po and 210Pb concentrations in cultivated and uncultivated soil from different areas
    Ozden, Banu
    Ugur, Aysun
    Esetlili, Tolga
    Esetlili, Bihter Colak
    Kurucu, Yusuf
    GEODERMA, 2013, 192 : 7 - 11
  • [32] THE POROSITY OF SOIL AGGREGATES FROM BULK SOIL AND FROM SOIL ADHERING TO ROOTS
    GUIDI, G
    POGGIO, G
    PETRUZZELLI, G
    PLANT AND SOIL, 1985, 87 (02) : 311 - 314
  • [33] SOIL-MOISTURE CONTENT AND THE GRAIN-YIELD OF WINTER-WHEAT GROWN AFTER WINTER-WHEAT IN MINIMALLY CULTIVATED OR UNCULTIVATED SOIL
    SUSKEVIC, M
    ODLOZILIK, S
    ROSTLINNA VYROBA, 1979, 25 (09): : 945 - 952
  • [34] SOIL-EROSION AND REDISTRIBUTION ON CULTIVATED AND UNCULTIVATED LAND NEAR LAS-BARDENAS IN THE CENTRAL EBRO RIVER BASIN, SPAIN
    QUINE, TA
    NAVAS, A
    WALLING, DE
    MACHIN, J
    LAND DEGRADATION AND REHABILITATION, 1994, 5 (01): : 41 - 55
  • [35] Wettability of Asphalt Concrete with Natural and Recycled Aggregates from Sanitary Ceramics
    Andrzejuk, Wojciech
    Szewczak, Andrzej
    Fic, Stanislaw
    Lagod, Grzegorz
    MATERIALS, 2020, 13 (17)
  • [36] COMPOSITIONAL DIFFERENCES IN ORGANIC-MATTER AMONG CULTIVATED AND UNCULTIVATED ARGIUDOLLS AND HAPLUDALFS DERIVED FROM LOESS
    ZHANG, H
    THOMPSON, ML
    SANDOR, JA
    SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 1988, 52 (01) : 216 - 222
  • [37] THE WETTABILITY OF A PLASTIC MULCH - ITS EFFECTS ON THE TEMPERATURES AND ITS NEMATICIDE ACTION DURING SOLARIZATION OF A CULTIVATED SOIL
    JAFFRIN, A
    MAKHLOUF, S
    LAMASSESE, CS
    BETTACHINI, A
    VOISIN, R
    AGRONOMIE, 1989, 9 (07): : 729 - 741
  • [38] CARBON AND NITROGEN DISTRIBUTION IN AGGREGATES FROM CULTIVATED AND NATIVE GRASSLAND SOILS
    CAMBARDELLA, CA
    ELLIOTT, ET
    SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 1993, 57 (04) : 1071 - 1076
  • [39] Small-scale heterogeneity in carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide and methane production from aggregates of a cultivated sandy-loam soil
    Sey, Benjamin K.
    Manceur, Ameur M.
    Whalen, Joann K.
    Gregorich, Edward G.
    Rochette, Philippe
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2008, 40 (09): : 2468 - 2473
  • [40] Allelochemicals from the Rhizosphere Soil of Cultivated Astragalus hoantchy
    Guo, Kai
    He, Xiaofeng
    Yan, Zhiqiang
    Li, Xiuzhuang
    Ren, Xia
    Pan, Le
    Qin, Bo
    JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY, 2016, 64 (17) : 3345 - 3352