Search results for "soil"
showing 10 items of 3493 documents
Les émissions de protoxyde d'azote (N2O) d'origine agricole : évaluation au niveau du territoire français
2003
National audience
Organic carbon dynamics in soil particle-size separates of sandy spodosols when forest is cleared for maize cropping
2003
21 ref.; International audience
Emissions de méthane (CH4) et d’oxydes d’azote (N2O et NOx) par les sols cultivés. Aspects généraux et effet du non travail du sol
2008
National audience; L'objectif de ce travail bibliographique est de faire le point sur l'effet du non travail du sol sur les émissions de méthane (CH4) et d'oxydes d'azote (N2O et NOx) à partir des sols cultivés. Après avoir mentionné les contributions respectives au réchauffement climatique planétaire des principaux gaz à effet de serre (GES) nous rappelons les mécanismes de production et de régulation des émissions de méthane et d'oxydes d'azote à partir du sol. Concernant le méthane, les sols de systèmes cultivés des pays tempérés présentent généralement des flux négatifs, correspondant à une oxydation du méthane par le sol. Il y a peu ou pas de différence d'oxydation entre système labour…
Search for biological signature of the degradation of chlordecone in soil of the French West Indies
2015
The use of chlordecone (CLD) to eradicate the weevil populations in the banana plantations in the French West Indies (Guadeloupe and Martinique) between 1972 and 1993 led to the contamination of the soil and the environment. This very hydrophobic organochlorine insecticide persists in the soil where it slowly transfers not only to the water resources but also to terrestrial and aquatic biota (plants, animals, fishes, shellfishes). Deemed “non-degradable”, CLD is resistant to photolysis, hydrolysis and biodegradation. To date, there is no method to remediate the 20,000 hectares of polluted soil with this insecticide. Given the extent of CLD pollution, biological decontamination processes app…
Analyze and simulation a dynamic of soil indicators fertility under different agricultural management practices in cotton area of Togo
2011
Using data observed during 20 to 40 years in different agro-ecosystems of Togo, we analyzed soil fertility dynamic under different agricultural management practices. Tree soil C models of varying complexity were tested, and the most accurate in terms of soil C dynamics description in these tropical soils was associated with the QUEFTS model and with nutrient partial balance to analyze the effect of each agricultural management practice. Results indicated that, although fertilizers N, P and K were continuously applied at a recommended rate by the research (RR) or at this rate increased in 50% (1.5RR), initial cotton and cereals yields of 1.5 to 2 t ha˗1 and 2 to 3 t ha˗1, respectively, decre…
A priori parameterisation of the CERES soil-crop models and tests against several European data sets
2002
Mechanistic soil-crop models have become indispensable tools to investigate the effect of management practices on the productivity or environmental impacts of arable crops. Ideally these models may claim to be universally applicable because they simulate the major processes governing the fate of inputs such as fertiliser nitrogen or pesticides. However, because they deal with complex systems and uncertain phenomena, site-specific calibration is usually a prerequisite to ensure their predictions are realistic. This statement implies that some experimental knowledge on the system to be simulated should be available prior to any modelling attempt, and raises a tremendous limitation to practica…
Effect of incorporation of Brassica napus L. residues in soils on mycorrhizal fungus colonisation of roots and phosphorus uptake by maize (Zea mays L…
2007
International audience; Plants in the Brassicaceae family are known to contain thioglucoside compounds that produce isothiocyanates when tissues are disrupted. These chemicals have a negative effect on soil-borne fungal pathogens, and possibly on vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi. We investigated the effect of incorporation of Brassica napus L. residues in a soil on mycorrhizal colonisation of roots, P uptake and growth of following maize (Zea mays L.) crop. A pot experiment was carried out in a glasshouse with pre-inoculation with Glomus intraradices (+I and -I), incorporation of B. napus L. residues (+R and -R) and mineral P fertilization (+P and -P) as studied factors. The soil…
Morphology and yield response to weed pressure by corn hybrids differing in canopy architecture
2001
Abstract Recently, corn ( Zea mays L.) hybrids accumulating more leaf area above the ear, maturing earlier, yielding better in narrower row spacings and tolerating higher population densities than conventional hybrids have been developed. However, no research has been conducted to assess their ability to compete with weeds. The objective of this study was to quantify morphological and grain yield responses of hybrids with differing canopy architectures to the presence and absence of weeds. Field experiments were conducted in 1996, 1997, and 1998 at Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Quebec and in 1996 at Ottawa, Ontario. Three hybrids, leafy reduced-stature (LRS), late maturing big leaf (LMBL), and con…
Dependence of seed nitrogen concentration on plant nitrogen availability during the seed filling in pea
1999
Abstract The final seed nitrogen (N) concentration of the pea ( Pisum sativum L.) varies greatly with environment. These variations seem to be related to N availability in the plant. To understand such an effect, the pattern of seed N concentration during seed filling was analysed at a given node as the ratio of seed N accumulation rate and seed dry matter accumulation rate. Three experiments were conducted in the field and glasshouse. Pea genotypes ‘Solara’, ‘Frisson’ and its non-nodulating mutant ‘P2’ were grown and different treatments were applied to manipulate N availability during seed filling. Treatments included N supply (addition of N fertiliser), depodding (removal of pods) and de…
: J. Sci. Food Agric.
2017
Background: The measurement of carbon isotopic discrimination in grape sugars at harvest (δ13 C) is an integrated assessment of water status during ripening. It is an efficient alternative to assess variability in the field and discriminate between management zones in precision viticulture, but further work is needed to completely understand the signal.; Results: This work, spanning over 3 years, performed in a hillslope toposequence in Burgundy, delineates the relationships between main soil properties (gravel amount, slope, texture) and the grapevine water status assessed by δ13 C. The highest δ13 C, indicating most severe water deficit, was recorded in gravelly soils on steep slopes. The…