Responses of soil organic carbon, aggregate diameters, and hydraulic properties to long‐term organic and conventional farming on a Vertisol in India

Graf‐Rosenfellner, Markus
Bhat, Nisar A.
Kayser, Gilles
Sisodia, Bhupendra S.
Kirchhof, Gunnar
Zikeli, Sabine
Cadisch, Georg
Bhullar, Gurbir S.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ldr.4216
Persistent URL: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/9987
Bhat, Nisar A.; 3 Department of Botany Government Holkar Science College Indore India
Kayser, Gilles; 2 Soil Ecology, Institute of Forest Sciences, Faculty of Environment and Natural Resources University of Freiburg Freiburg Germany
Sisodia, Bhupendra S.; 5 bioRe Association Kasrawad India
Kirchhof, Gunnar; 6 School of Agriculture and Food Sciences The University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia
Zikeli, Sabine; 7 Center for Organic Farming University of Hohenheim Stuttgart Germany
Cadisch, Georg; 8 Agronomy in the Tropics and Subtropics, Institute of Agricultural Sciences in the Tropics (Hans‐Ruthenberg‐Institute), Faculty of Agricultural Science University of Hohenheim Stuttgart Germany
Bhullar, Gurbir S.; 4 Department of International Cooperation Research Institute of Organic Agriculture (FiBL) Frick Switzerland
Abstract
Organic matter management can improve soil structural properties. This is crucial for agricultural soils in tropical regions threatened by high rainfall intensities. Compared to conventional farming, organic farming is usually deemed to increase organic carbon and improve soil structural properties such as stability and permeability. However, how much, if any, buildup of organic carbon is possible or indeed occurring also depends on soil type and environmental factors. We compared the impact of seven years of organic farming (annually 13.6 t ha−1 of composted manure) with that of conventional practices (2 t ha−1 of farmyard manure with 150–170 kg N ha−1 of mineral fertilizers) on soil structural properties. The study was conducted on a Vertisol in India with a two‐year crop rotation of cotton soybean wheat. Despite large differences in organic amendment application, organic carbon was not significantly different at 9.6 mg C g−1 on average in the topsoil. However, the size distribution of water‐stable aggregates shifted toward more aggregates <137 μm in the organic systems. Cumulative water intake was lower compared to the conventional systems, leading to higher runoff and erosion. These changes might be related to the lower pH and higher exchangeable sodium in the organic systems. Our results indicate that higher application of organic amendments did not lead to higher soil organic carbon and associated improvement in soil structures properties compared to integrated fertilization in this study. Chemical properties may dominate soil aggregation retarding the uptake and integration of organic amendments for sustainable agricultural intensification in tropical, semiarid climates.
Subjects
aggregate size distributionorganic farming
soil organic carbon
tropics and subtropics
wet aggregate stability