Search results for "no-till"

showing 8 items of 38 documents

Régulations biologiques des adventices: la prédation par les carabidés en semis direct sous couvert

2013

[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio][SDE] Environmental Sciencesplant–animal interactionscarabid[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio][SDE]Environmental Scienceslandscape composition[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biologyno-tillage[SDV.BV] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biologytrophic guild
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CA-SYS: A long term experimental platform on agroecology at various scales

2018

National audience; The French National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA) has established an ambitious, multiscale, agricultural experimental infrastructure (the CA-SYS platform) as a collaboration between the Research Unit, Agroécologie (Dijon, eastern France), and the Experimental Research Unit, Domaine d’Epoisses (20 km next to Dijon). CA-SYS covers an area of 120 ha, and is divided into 47 fields, each of which has drainage and can be irrigated, and will be initiated in autumn 2018. The aims of CA-SYS are to: i) design and evaluate new agroecological systems; ii) study the transition from current farming systems towards these new agroecological systems, with goals that include a…

agroecology[SDE] Environmental Sciencesno-tillevaluationlegumes[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]multicriteriacropping systemslandscapesustainable agriculture[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]CA-SYSexperimental platform[SDE]Environmental Sciencestillage[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biologyplant/microbe interaction[SDV.BV] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biologybiocontrol
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Effects of compost input and tillage intensity on soil microbial biomass and activity under Mediterranean conditions

2010

Organic amendment and tillage reduction are two common practices to contrast soil organic matter decline, thus promoting sustainable cropping and carbon sequestration. In a horticultural land use system under Mediterranean climate, we evaluated the 9-year effects of two compost inputs (15 and 30 t ha−1 y−1, low and high input, respectively) and two tillage intensities (intensive and reduced) on soil macronutrients concentration, microbial biomass and activity. Total organic C, total N and POlsen were smaller in plots amended at low input, whilst intensive tillage decreased them at both compost inputs. These decreases in intensively tilled plots was ascribed to the disruption of soil aggrega…

chemistry.chemical_classificationCompostSoil organic matterSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaAmendmentSoil ScienceMineralization (soil science)engineering.materialCarbon sequestrationcomplex mixturesMicrobiologyTillageNo-till farmingCompost input . Tillage intensity . Microbial biomass C and N . Basal- and glucose-induced respiration. Enzyme activitiesAgronomychemistryengineeringEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterAgronomy and Crop ScienceBiology and Fertility of Soils
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Long-term cropping systems and tillage management effects on soil organic carbon stocks and steady state level of C sequestration rates in a semiarid…

2010

A calcareous and clayey xeric Chromic Haploxerept of a long-term experimental site in Sicily (Italy) was sampled (0–15 cm depth) under different land use management and cropping systems (CSs) to study their effect on soil aggregate stability and organic carbon (SOC). The experimental site had three tillage managements (no till [NT], dual-layer [DL] and conventional tillage [CT]) and two CSs (durum wheat monocropping [W] and durum wheat/faba bean rotation [WB]). The annually sequestered SOC with W was 2·75-times higher than with WB. SOC concentrations were also higher. Both NT and CT management systems were the most effective in SOC sequestration whereas with DL system no C was sequestered. …

chemistry.chemical_classificationConventional tillageMonocropping3303 DevelopmentSoil ScienceSoil carbonVertisolDevelopmentTillage2300 General Environmental ScienceNo-till farming10122 Institute of GeographyAgronomychemistrycarbon sequestration particle size-fraction soil aggregates soil organic matter pools2304 Environmental ChemistryEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceOrganic matter910 Geography & travelcarbon sequestration particle size-fraction soil aggregates soil organic matter pools SicilyCalcareous1111 Soil ScienceGeneral Environmental Science
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Repelencia al agua en suelos forestales afectados por incendios y en suelos agrícolas bajo distintos manejos y abandono

2013

Soil water repellency determines the water available in the soil system, the runoff generation and the geomorphologic processes. This study examines the soil wettability during the summer of 2008 and 2009 in forest soils with different fire history, and in agricultural soils with different managements. Water repellency was assessed using the Water Drop Penetration Time test (WDPT). Results indicate that water repellency is more frequent and persistent in forest soils than in agricultural ones. In the former, water repellency is reduced a year after a fire and is not recovered during at least 12 years. In agricultural soils, it is found under no till treatment, whereas sites treated with her…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbusiness.industryGeography Planning and DevelopmentAgricultural managementForestryEnvironmental Science (miscellaneous)TillageGreen manureNo-till farmingAgronomychemistryAgricultureSoil waterEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Environmental scienceOrganic matterSurface runoffbusinessCuadernos de Investigación Geográfica
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Tillage Versus No-Tillage. Soil Properties and Hydrology in an Organic Persimmon Farm in Eastern Iberian Peninsula

2020

There is an urgent need to implement environmentally friendly agriculture management practices to achieve the Sustainable Goals for Development (SDGs) of the United Nations by 2030. Mediterranean agriculture is characterized by intense and millennia-old tillage management and as a consequence degraded soil. No-Tillage has been widely examined as a solution for soil degradation but No-Tillage relies more on the application of herbicides that reduce plant cover, which in turn enhances soil erosion. However, No-Tillage with weed cover should be researched to promote organic farming and sustainable agriculture. Therefore, we compare Tillage against No-Tillage using weed cover as an alternative …

lcsh:Hydraulic engineeringGeography Planning and Developmentrunoff010501 environmental sciencesAquatic Science01 natural sciencesBiochemistryTillagesoillcsh:Water supply for domestic and industrial purposeslcsh:TC1-978Soil retrogression and degradationSustainable agricultureweedsNo-Tillage0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWater Science and Technologylcsh:TD201-500rainfall simulation04 agricultural and veterinary scienceserosionSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceepersimmonTillageAgronomySoil waterINGENIERIA CARTOGRAFICA GEODESIA Y FOTOGRAMETRIA040103 agronomy & agricultureOrganic farmingErosion0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental sciencePlant coverSurface runoffweedIberian PeninsulaWater
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Legacy Effects of Contrasting Long-Term Integrated Weed Management Systems

2022

To reduce reliance on herbicides and maintain crop productivity, integrated weed management (IWM) seeks to optimize synergies between diverse sets of weed management practices combined at the cropping system scale. Nevertheless, data on weed community response to the long-term implementation of IWM practices remain scare. Here, we assessed the effects of four IWM systems with contrasting objectives and practices (S2: transition from superficial tillage to conservation agriculture; S3: no-mechanical weeding; S4: mixed mechanical and chemical weeding; S5: herbicide-free; all with 6 year rotations) compared to a conventional reference (S1: herbicide-based with systematic plowing and a 3 year r…

seedbankno-tillweed communitySherbicide reliancePlant cultureAgricultureGeneral Medicinefunctional traituniformity trialSB1-1110Frontiers in Agronomy
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Effective Practices in Mitigating Soil Erosion from Fields

2017

Soil erosion by water is a natural process that cannot be avoided. Soil erosion depends on many factors, and a distinction should be made between humanly unchangeable (e.g., rainfall) and modifiable (e.g., length of the field) soil erosion factors. Soil erosion has both on-site and off-site effects. Soil conservation tries to combine modifiable factors so as to maintain erosion in an area of interest to an acceptable level. Strategies to control soil erosion have to be adapted to the desired land use. Knowledge of soil loss tolerance, T, i.e., the maximum admissible erosion from a given field, allows technicians or farmers to establish whether soil conservation practices need to be applied …

soil erosion soil loss tolerance on-site and off-site erosion impacts soil conservation burned areas erosion modeling for soil conservationSoil biodiversityAgroforestrycomplex mixturesSoil managementNo-till farmingEnvironmental protectionSoil functionsSoil retrogression and degradationEnvironmental scienceSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliDryland salinitySoil conservationSurface runoff
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