Home page Top menu bar
   
191 pixel spacer

New Zealand Journal of Crop and Horticultural Science abstracts


Effects of past and current management practices on crop yield and nitrogen leaching—a comparison of organic and conventional cropping systems

C. Stark1
L. M. Condron2
A. Stewart3
H. J. Di2
M. O’Callaghan4

1 Teagasc
 Johnstown Castle
 Wexford, Ireland
 email: christine.stark@teagasc.ie
2 Agriculture and Life Sciences Division
 P.O. Box 84
 Lincoln University
 Canterbury, New Zealand
3 National Centre for Advanced Bio-protection
  Technologies
 P.O. Box 84
 Lincoln University
 Canterbury, New Zealand
4 AgResearch
 P.O. Box 60, Lincoln
 Canterbury, New Zealand

Abstract Farming practices can have significant effects on important soil processes, including nitrogen (N) dynamics and nitrate leaching. A lysimeter experiment was conducted to determine differences in N leaching resulting from past and current crop management practices. Intact monolith lysimeters (50 cm diam. × 70 cm deep) were taken from sites of the same soil type that had either been under long-term organic or conventional crop management. These were then managed according to established organic and conventional practices over 21/2 years using the same crop rotation (barley (Hordeum vulgare L.), maize (Zea mays L.), rape (Brassica napus L. ssp. oleifera) plus a lupin green manure (Lupinus angustifolius L.)) and two fertiliser regimes, resulting in four treatments based on soil management history and current fertilisation strategy. Dry matter yield of each crop was determined after harvest and leachates were collected after significant rainfall events and analysed for total mineral N concentrations. Mineral fertilisation had a clear positive effect on yields of the first crop, whereas there were no considerable differences between treatments for the last crop owing to a significant positive effect of green manure incorporation on yields. Although there was a trend of lower mineral N leaching from organically fertilised soils (organic management: 24.2 kg N ha–1; conventional management: 28.6), differences in N losses were not statistically significant between treatments. This shows that under the experimental conditions, leaching losses and crop yields were more strongly influenced by crop rotation and green manuring than by the presence or absence of mineral fertilisation. Overall, the study highlights the benefits of including a green manure in the crop rotation of any farming system.

Keywords past and current crop management; organic and conventional farming practices; green manure; intact monolith lysimeters; mineral N leaching; crop yield

New Zealand Journal of Crop and Horticultural Science, 2006, Vol. 34: 207–215
0014–0671/06/3403–0207      © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2006
H06015; Online publication date 6 July 2006. Received 6 March 2006; accepted 20 April 2006

PDF file of entire paper: Print-quality (316K) | screen-quality (247K)


This year's abstracts | Journal home page | All abstracts | Publishing home page

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Advisory | Awards | Directory | Education | Events| Funding | Members | News | Publishing | Shop | Topics | Policy |

Problems with the site? Contact the webmaster