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Impact of straw management on seasonal soil carbon dioxide emissions, soil water content, and temperature in a semi-arid region of China.

Authors :
Wang, Weiyu
Akhtar, Kashif
Ren, Guangxin
Yang, Gaihe
Feng, Yongzhong
Yuan, Liuyan
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Feb2019, Vol. 652, p471-482. 12p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Abstract The use of crop residues as mulching materials or organic fertilizer, instead of burning, can help improve the soil organic carbon (SOC) and crop grain yield. An experiment was conducted for three consecutive seasons from 2013 to 2016, to study the effect of no straw (S0), S1/2 (700 kg/ha soybean straw, and 3000 kg/ha wheat straw), and S1 (1400 kg ha−1 soybean straw, and 6000 kg/ha wheat straw) treatments in wheat-soybean multi-crop system. The randomized complete block design was used with three repeats. Compared with the S0 regime, a significant increase of 0.5%–8.7% and 1.4%–27.7% in soil CO 2 emission was observed in the S1 regime during all growth stages of summer soybean and winter wheat, respectively. Soil temperature of S1/2 and S1 was 0.1–1.1 °C and 0.3–1.4 °C higher than that of S0 during the seeding stage and greening stage for wheat, during 2013 to 2016. During wheat season, soil moisture was higher in the S1 than in the S0 treatment. Likewise, wheat, soybean crop resulted the same results. Soil CO 2 emissions increase with the increasing in soil temperature, and 73.4–73.9% of the variation could be explained by seasonal variation in soil temperature in wheat season. Similarly, 69.5–74.7% of the variation in soil CO 2 emissions is recorded by seasonal variation in soil temperature in summer soybean season. Meanwhile (S1) increased the SOC and grain yield of wheat and soybean when compared to S0. Straw input increasing soil CO 2 , grain yield and SOC content, considering the benefits of straw inputs to crops yield and SOC content, It is concluded that the addition of straw improve agriculture production. However, the types of straw inputs in order to promote the sequestration of soil organic carbon with the decrease in greenhouse gas emission is the future research direction for agriculture development in Guanzhong region of China. Graphical abstract Unlabelled Image Highlights • Soil temperature was the main driven for soil CO 2 emission • Cumulative soil CO 2 emission increased by straw input • Straw input increased soil organic carbon • Straw returning and mulching increased soil CO 2 emission and crop yield [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
652
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
133665830
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.10.207