Dr. John Grove - Fifty Years Of No-till Research In Kentucky
Use of product names or labels does
not constitute endorsement by myself
or the University of Kentucky
John H. Grove
Professor, Plant and Soil Sciences Dep.
Director, University of Kentucky
Research and Education Center;
Princeton, Kentucky
Introduction
• No-till plant nutrition and yield?
• No-till soil properties and yield?
• Long-term research can inform us as
on a number of questions
Introduction
• Long-term research
– 5 years or more
• Why more valuable to us?
– Reflects what we do/who we are
• Crop production is a long-term
enterprise
– Need to ‘sample the seasons’
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
Soil Properties Can Drive Yield
• Over time, NT yields generally
greater
• Not due to a lack of N (or other
nutrients)
• Other soil properties dominate
Effect: p>F:
Till <0.05
N <0.001
Till x N <0.05
Effect: _ p>F:
Till <0.0001
N <0.0001
Till x N <0.01
50
70
90
110
50 70 90 110
Average seasonal yield (bu/ac)
Treatmentyield(bu/ac)
TILL
NO-TILL
130
160
190
220
130 160 190 220
Average seasonal yield (bu/ac)
Treatmentyield(bu/ac)
TILL
NO-TILL
Wheat Corn
Corn generally likes no-tillage:
Wheat doesn’t always
average seasonal yield (bu/ac) average seasonal yield (bu/ac)
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
NT Soil Physics
• A. Generally cooler – all year long
• B. Generally wetter – after every rain
• A + B = C--> Generally higher heat
capacity (takes more energy, sunlight,
time to raise soil temperature 1 oF)
• D. Higher bulk density(?)
• B + D = E--> Generally lower oxygen (O2),
higher carbon dioxide (CO2) levels
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
Does Periodic Tillage (Once Every
Two Years) Influence Crop Yield?
Yes, but depends on the crop.
Seasonal yield responses - by crop
Till > NT Till = NT Till < NT
Wheat 4/10 5/10 1/10
DC Soybean 1/9 7/9 1/9
Corn 0/8 4/8 4/8
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
Pore Size Distribution
0.00
0.05
0.10
0.15
0.20
0.25
0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000
Tension (MPa)
SWC(gg
-1
).
No Till
Till
Pore diameter (mm)
30 3 0.3 0.03 0.003 0.0003
0.00
0.05
0.10
0.15
0.20
0.25
0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000
Tension (MPa)
SoilWaterContent(gg
-1
).`.
No Till
Till
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
Both have porosity, but which has structure?
Structure = functional utility.
Which better resists erosion? Compressive forces?
Chemical analysis would find no differences.
Structure adds value not measured by chemistry.
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
Thin Section of a Soil Aggregate
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
What’s A Little
Extra Porosity Worth?
• 2 to 4 days without wilting between
rainfall events!!
Effect: p>F:
Till <0.0001
N <0.0001
Till x N <0.7081
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
NT Nutrient Stratification
What’s the evidence?
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
Stratification of Mehlich III P
Average (both) = 20 ppm STP
Corn K Nutrition & Stratification
Blevins et al. (1986)
The vertical distribution of soil test K and K uptake by corn grown in two
tillage systems.
increment
soil test K
interval
soil test K
corn
K uptake
depth
increment
no-till
(NT)
plowed
(MP)
depth
interval
no-till
(NT)
plowed
(MP)
ratio
NT/MP year
ratio
NT/MP
inches ppm inches ppm
0 to 2 170 132 0 to 2 170 132 1.29 1980 1.35
2 to 6 104 113 0 to 6 126 119 1.06 1981 1.25
6 to 12 86 95 0 to 12 105 107 0.99 average 1.30
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
Corn Yield Response to P Availability and Stratification
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
0 5 10 15 20 25
Average Soil Test P (lb/acre)
Yield(bu/acre)
stratified
not stratified
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
2400
2600
2800
3000
3200
LS HS
GrainYield(bu/acre)
S0 S1
39.5
43.7
45.7
43.5
Soybean response to No (S0) or Yes (S1)
Starter P at Low (LS) or High (HS) P
Stratification
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
P Applied-Removal and Soil Test P at 92 P2O5/acre
0
50
100
150
200
250
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Year
SoilP(lbP/acre)
Soil Test P 0 to 3
Soil Test P 3 to 6
Cumulative P Applied
Cumulative P Removed
8.2 lb P2O5/lb STP
Soil P Dynamics @ 92 lb P2O5/A
92 lb P2O5/A
= 40 lb P/A
Fertilizer P applied once every two years (ahead of corn planting).
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
The lb P2O5/A
required to change
MIII soil test P
(STP) by 1 lb/A – as
related to the initial
soil test P level –
after an 8 week lab
incubation of mixed
(tilled) soil.
Thom and Dollarhide, 1987
12 lb P2O5 per lb
STP => 30% lower
fixation in NT soil
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
If You Don’t Mix It,
You Don’t Fix It
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
If Stratification Is Such
A “Good Thing” In NT, When Do You
Need The Most Nutrient Management?
Avoiding Losses:
Immobilization, Leaching,
Denitrification, Volatilization
Nitrogen
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
Nitrogen
Avoiding Losses: Immobilization,
Leaching, Denitrification,
Volatilization
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
NT’s Soil Nitrogen Biology
• Larger biological community; more
stratified;
• Shift towards more anaerobic, less
aerobic (less oxidative, more reductive)
• Slower aggregate turnover
• Faster N immobilization, denitrification,
volatilization; slower N mineralization,
nitrification
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
N Grain
N Rate Yield
Source lb N/A bu/A
control 0 116d
UAN 80 189c
UAN + Instinct 80 204bc
UAN 120 218b
UAN + Instinct 120 241a
Corn Yield - 2009
Schwab
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
Take-Home on N
Inhibitors/Stabilizers
• Inhibitors are needed on some fields in
all years; more fields in some years
• Know the field, know the situation, know
the season
• There are alternatives (placement,
split/delayed application) to the N
inhibitors, enhancers – may be cheaper,
doable (or not)
Soil C and N:
How Much Difference Due To
Tillage And Fertilizer N?
Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences
Corn Yield to Applied & Residual N
from Organic Matter and Tillage
Objectives
• Examine the role of fertilizer N in
SOC accumulation/loss.
• Understand the SOC status of
managed cropland relative to
unmanaged grassland.
• Determine the role of tillage in SOC
accumulation/loss, especially at depth.
Measure Soil Organic
Matter (as SOC) After 38
Years: By Depth And For
The Whole Root Zone
Long-Term Tillage-N Trial
• Continuous corn, with a winter cereal
cover crop.
• Initiated in spring 1970 into a bluegrass
(Poa pratensis L.) pasture.
• No-till (NT) and moldboard plow (MP)
tillage, with 0, 75, 150 and 300 lb N/A
as 34-0-0.
• Deep, well-drained Maury silt loam near
Lexington, KY
Design and Execution
• Soil sampled 0, 150 and 300 lb N/A
rate treatments, in both no-till (NT)
and moldboard plow (MP) tillage
treatments, in April, 2008.
• Took 3 cores per plot, to a depth of 1
m, in 10 cm (4 inch) increments.
• Determined soil bulk density (BD), total
N (TN) and organic carbon (SOC).
• Soil sampled nearby sod at 4 corner
locations.
****
**
****
**
*
****
****
**
**
*
Tillage, N and SOC
• At all N rates, MP resulted in greater
SOC uniformity throughout upper 30
cm and a pronounced SOC ‘bulge’ at 30
to 40 cm.
• NT profile SOC distribution similar to
that for the grass sod.
• Relative to the unfertilized grass sod,
unfertilized crop land SOC differences
(25% less) were confined to the
surface 50 cm of both MP and NT soils.
And When All Depths
Are Added Up?
Dr. John Grove - Fifty Years Of No-till Research In Kentucky
Tillage, N and SOC
• Without added N, SOC change due to
agroecosystem change (grassland sod to
continuous corn) was not affected by
tillage, falling equally low.
• MP tillage is a major oxidative force,
especially at greater N rates that
would otherwise promote greater SOC
retention. Greater N gives ‘opportunity’
for SOC formation with cover crop/NT.
Tillage and Fertilizer N:
Temporal Change in Corn Yield
Response
Long-Term Tillage-N Trial
• Continuous corn, with a winter cereal
cover crop, for 50 yr (1970 to 2019).
• Initiated in spring 1970 into a bluegrass
(Poa pratensis L.) pasture.
• No-till (NT) and moldboard plow (MP)
tillage, with 0, 75, 150 and 300 lb N/A
as 34-0-0.
• Deep, well-drained Maury silt loam near
Lexington, KY
Spring, 1970: Start With A
50+ Yr-Old Pasture/Sod
50-Year Trial Execution
• Tillage and burn-down herbicide
treatments imposed middle April.
– Moldboard plowed 8 to 10 inches deep 1-2
weeks prior to planting
– Disk harrowed 3 t 4 inches deep
• Corn planted late April to mid-May.
• Ammonium nitrate applied within a week
of planting.
50-Year Trial Execution
• Weed control:
– burndown + pre-emerge
– post-emerge (usually twice)
• Fungicide & Insecticide – seed
treatment only
• Hand harvested late September to early
October.
• Winter cereal (rye, wheat, triticale)
cover crop established post-harvest
Introduction
We do long-term
experiments, not just
because we expect there to
be a simple effect of time,
but because we think there
might be an interaction
between time and one or
more treatments or
treatment combinations.
Introduction
The impact of time has random and
non-random components:
Continuous application of
input/treatment
One application of fertilizer N each
year; one tillage sequence per year
‘Seasonality’ of crop response
In rainfed agriculture, crop response
to N varies with moisture
availability/stress
Assumptions, Going Forward
 Other management changes captured ‘over time’:
 cultivar selection
 row spacing and plant population
 planting date
 herbicide selection
 rye establishment method
 pH/nutrient management.
 50 years adequately represents the “population”
of seasons.
 Average annual experiment yield (annual grand
mean) adequately represents “seasonal quality”.
Corn Yield Results
Partitioning the Variability in
50 yr of Corn Grain Yield
Source of variance
Proportion of
total variance %
Probability of a
greater F value
year 42.44 < 0.0001
block 0.85 <0.0001
tillage 0.36 <0.0001
year*tillage 2.36 < 0.0001
N rate 33.76 < 0.0001
year*N rate 12.74 < 0.0001
tillage*N rate 0.05 0.0036
year*tillage*N rate 1.33 < 0.0001
McIntosh (1983) Agron. J. 75:153
Effect: _ p>F:
Till <0.0001
N <0.0001
Till x N <0.0001
Effect: p>F:
Till <0.0001
N <0.0001
Till x N <0.0062
Effect: p>F:
Till <0.0001
N <0.0001
Till x N <0.0085
Effect: p>F:
Till <0.0001
N <0.0001
Till x N <0.0791
Effect: p>F:
Till <0.0001
N <0.0001
Till x N <0.7081
Less Lumping:
More Splitting
Separating Annual Trend
From Seasonal Behavior
Dr. John Grove - Fifty Years Of No-till Research In Kentucky
Dr. John Grove - Fifty Years Of No-till Research In Kentucky
Dr. John Grove - Fifty Years Of No-till Research In Kentucky
Dr. John Grove - Fifty Years Of No-till Research In Kentucky
Dr. John Grove - Fifty Years Of No-till Research In Kentucky
Historical Tillage Response Depends on N:
Historical Tillage Response Depends on N:
Historical N Response
Depends on Tillage:
Conclusions
• Character of the tillage by N rate
interaction on corn yield profoundly
changed with time.
• NT corn environment more favorable for
improved yield potential with better
genetics and management – more water.
AfterBefore

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Dr. John Grove - Fifty Years Of No-till Research In Kentucky

  • 2. Use of product names or labels does not constitute endorsement by myself or the University of Kentucky John H. Grove Professor, Plant and Soil Sciences Dep. Director, University of Kentucky Research and Education Center; Princeton, Kentucky
  • 3. Introduction • No-till plant nutrition and yield? • No-till soil properties and yield? • Long-term research can inform us as on a number of questions
  • 4. Introduction • Long-term research – 5 years or more • Why more valuable to us? – Reflects what we do/who we are • Crop production is a long-term enterprise – Need to ‘sample the seasons’
  • 5. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences Soil Properties Can Drive Yield • Over time, NT yields generally greater • Not due to a lack of N (or other nutrients) • Other soil properties dominate
  • 6. Effect: p>F: Till <0.05 N <0.001 Till x N <0.05 Effect: _ p>F: Till <0.0001 N <0.0001 Till x N <0.01
  • 7. 50 70 90 110 50 70 90 110 Average seasonal yield (bu/ac) Treatmentyield(bu/ac) TILL NO-TILL 130 160 190 220 130 160 190 220 Average seasonal yield (bu/ac) Treatmentyield(bu/ac) TILL NO-TILL Wheat Corn Corn generally likes no-tillage: Wheat doesn’t always average seasonal yield (bu/ac) average seasonal yield (bu/ac)
  • 8. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences NT Soil Physics • A. Generally cooler – all year long • B. Generally wetter – after every rain • A + B = C--> Generally higher heat capacity (takes more energy, sunlight, time to raise soil temperature 1 oF) • D. Higher bulk density(?) • B + D = E--> Generally lower oxygen (O2), higher carbon dioxide (CO2) levels
  • 9. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences Does Periodic Tillage (Once Every Two Years) Influence Crop Yield? Yes, but depends on the crop. Seasonal yield responses - by crop Till > NT Till = NT Till < NT Wheat 4/10 5/10 1/10 DC Soybean 1/9 7/9 1/9 Corn 0/8 4/8 4/8
  • 10. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences Pore Size Distribution 0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Tension (MPa) SWC(gg -1 ). No Till Till Pore diameter (mm) 30 3 0.3 0.03 0.003 0.0003 0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Tension (MPa) SoilWaterContent(gg -1 ).`. No Till Till
  • 11. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences Both have porosity, but which has structure? Structure = functional utility. Which better resists erosion? Compressive forces? Chemical analysis would find no differences. Structure adds value not measured by chemistry.
  • 12. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences Thin Section of a Soil Aggregate
  • 13. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences What’s A Little Extra Porosity Worth? • 2 to 4 days without wilting between rainfall events!!
  • 14. Effect: p>F: Till <0.0001 N <0.0001 Till x N <0.7081
  • 15. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences NT Nutrient Stratification What’s the evidence?
  • 16. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences Stratification of Mehlich III P Average (both) = 20 ppm STP
  • 17. Corn K Nutrition & Stratification Blevins et al. (1986) The vertical distribution of soil test K and K uptake by corn grown in two tillage systems. increment soil test K interval soil test K corn K uptake depth increment no-till (NT) plowed (MP) depth interval no-till (NT) plowed (MP) ratio NT/MP year ratio NT/MP inches ppm inches ppm 0 to 2 170 132 0 to 2 170 132 1.29 1980 1.35 2 to 6 104 113 0 to 6 126 119 1.06 1981 1.25 6 to 12 86 95 0 to 12 105 107 0.99 average 1.30
  • 18. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences Corn Yield Response to P Availability and Stratification 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 0 5 10 15 20 25 Average Soil Test P (lb/acre) Yield(bu/acre) stratified not stratified
  • 19. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences 2400 2600 2800 3000 3200 LS HS GrainYield(bu/acre) S0 S1 39.5 43.7 45.7 43.5 Soybean response to No (S0) or Yes (S1) Starter P at Low (LS) or High (HS) P Stratification
  • 20. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences P Applied-Removal and Soil Test P at 92 P2O5/acre 0 50 100 150 200 250 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Year SoilP(lbP/acre) Soil Test P 0 to 3 Soil Test P 3 to 6 Cumulative P Applied Cumulative P Removed 8.2 lb P2O5/lb STP Soil P Dynamics @ 92 lb P2O5/A 92 lb P2O5/A = 40 lb P/A Fertilizer P applied once every two years (ahead of corn planting).
  • 21. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences The lb P2O5/A required to change MIII soil test P (STP) by 1 lb/A – as related to the initial soil test P level – after an 8 week lab incubation of mixed (tilled) soil. Thom and Dollarhide, 1987 12 lb P2O5 per lb STP => 30% lower fixation in NT soil
  • 22. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences If You Don’t Mix It, You Don’t Fix It
  • 23. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences If Stratification Is Such A “Good Thing” In NT, When Do You Need The Most Nutrient Management?
  • 25. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences Nitrogen Avoiding Losses: Immobilization, Leaching, Denitrification, Volatilization
  • 26. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences NT’s Soil Nitrogen Biology • Larger biological community; more stratified; • Shift towards more anaerobic, less aerobic (less oxidative, more reductive) • Slower aggregate turnover • Faster N immobilization, denitrification, volatilization; slower N mineralization, nitrification
  • 27. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences
  • 28. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences N Grain N Rate Yield Source lb N/A bu/A control 0 116d UAN 80 189c UAN + Instinct 80 204bc UAN 120 218b UAN + Instinct 120 241a Corn Yield - 2009 Schwab
  • 29. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences Take-Home on N Inhibitors/Stabilizers • Inhibitors are needed on some fields in all years; more fields in some years • Know the field, know the situation, know the season • There are alternatives (placement, split/delayed application) to the N inhibitors, enhancers – may be cheaper, doable (or not)
  • 30. Soil C and N: How Much Difference Due To Tillage And Fertilizer N?
  • 31. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences Corn Yield to Applied & Residual N from Organic Matter and Tillage
  • 32. Objectives • Examine the role of fertilizer N in SOC accumulation/loss. • Understand the SOC status of managed cropland relative to unmanaged grassland. • Determine the role of tillage in SOC accumulation/loss, especially at depth.
  • 33. Measure Soil Organic Matter (as SOC) After 38 Years: By Depth And For The Whole Root Zone
  • 34. Long-Term Tillage-N Trial • Continuous corn, with a winter cereal cover crop. • Initiated in spring 1970 into a bluegrass (Poa pratensis L.) pasture. • No-till (NT) and moldboard plow (MP) tillage, with 0, 75, 150 and 300 lb N/A as 34-0-0. • Deep, well-drained Maury silt loam near Lexington, KY
  • 35. Design and Execution • Soil sampled 0, 150 and 300 lb N/A rate treatments, in both no-till (NT) and moldboard plow (MP) tillage treatments, in April, 2008. • Took 3 cores per plot, to a depth of 1 m, in 10 cm (4 inch) increments. • Determined soil bulk density (BD), total N (TN) and organic carbon (SOC). • Soil sampled nearby sod at 4 corner locations.
  • 38. Tillage, N and SOC • At all N rates, MP resulted in greater SOC uniformity throughout upper 30 cm and a pronounced SOC ‘bulge’ at 30 to 40 cm. • NT profile SOC distribution similar to that for the grass sod. • Relative to the unfertilized grass sod, unfertilized crop land SOC differences (25% less) were confined to the surface 50 cm of both MP and NT soils.
  • 39. And When All Depths Are Added Up?
  • 41. Tillage, N and SOC • Without added N, SOC change due to agroecosystem change (grassland sod to continuous corn) was not affected by tillage, falling equally low. • MP tillage is a major oxidative force, especially at greater N rates that would otherwise promote greater SOC retention. Greater N gives ‘opportunity’ for SOC formation with cover crop/NT.
  • 42. Tillage and Fertilizer N: Temporal Change in Corn Yield Response
  • 43. Long-Term Tillage-N Trial • Continuous corn, with a winter cereal cover crop, for 50 yr (1970 to 2019). • Initiated in spring 1970 into a bluegrass (Poa pratensis L.) pasture. • No-till (NT) and moldboard plow (MP) tillage, with 0, 75, 150 and 300 lb N/A as 34-0-0. • Deep, well-drained Maury silt loam near Lexington, KY
  • 44. Spring, 1970: Start With A 50+ Yr-Old Pasture/Sod
  • 45. 50-Year Trial Execution • Tillage and burn-down herbicide treatments imposed middle April. – Moldboard plowed 8 to 10 inches deep 1-2 weeks prior to planting – Disk harrowed 3 t 4 inches deep • Corn planted late April to mid-May. • Ammonium nitrate applied within a week of planting.
  • 46. 50-Year Trial Execution • Weed control: – burndown + pre-emerge – post-emerge (usually twice) • Fungicide & Insecticide – seed treatment only • Hand harvested late September to early October. • Winter cereal (rye, wheat, triticale) cover crop established post-harvest
  • 47. Introduction We do long-term experiments, not just because we expect there to be a simple effect of time, but because we think there might be an interaction between time and one or more treatments or treatment combinations.
  • 48. Introduction The impact of time has random and non-random components: Continuous application of input/treatment One application of fertilizer N each year; one tillage sequence per year ‘Seasonality’ of crop response In rainfed agriculture, crop response to N varies with moisture availability/stress
  • 49. Assumptions, Going Forward  Other management changes captured ‘over time’:  cultivar selection  row spacing and plant population  planting date  herbicide selection  rye establishment method  pH/nutrient management.  50 years adequately represents the “population” of seasons.  Average annual experiment yield (annual grand mean) adequately represents “seasonal quality”.
  • 51. Partitioning the Variability in 50 yr of Corn Grain Yield Source of variance Proportion of total variance % Probability of a greater F value year 42.44 < 0.0001 block 0.85 <0.0001 tillage 0.36 <0.0001 year*tillage 2.36 < 0.0001 N rate 33.76 < 0.0001 year*N rate 12.74 < 0.0001 tillage*N rate 0.05 0.0036 year*tillage*N rate 1.33 < 0.0001 McIntosh (1983) Agron. J. 75:153
  • 52. Effect: _ p>F: Till <0.0001 N <0.0001 Till x N <0.0001
  • 53. Effect: p>F: Till <0.0001 N <0.0001 Till x N <0.0062
  • 54. Effect: p>F: Till <0.0001 N <0.0001 Till x N <0.0085
  • 55. Effect: p>F: Till <0.0001 N <0.0001 Till x N <0.0791
  • 56. Effect: p>F: Till <0.0001 N <0.0001 Till x N <0.7081
  • 58. Separating Annual Trend From Seasonal Behavior
  • 67. Conclusions • Character of the tillage by N rate interaction on corn yield profoundly changed with time. • NT corn environment more favorable for improved yield potential with better genetics and management – more water.