Edaphic Response and Behavior of Agricultural Soils to Mechanical Perturbation in Tillage

Author:

Mwiti Frankline1,Gitau Ayub2,Mbuge Duncan2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, University of Eldoret, Eldoret P.O. Box 1125-30100, Kenya

2. Department of Environmental and Biosystems Engineering, University of Nairobi, Nairobi P.O. Box 30197-00100, Kenya

Abstract

Mechanical perturbation constrains edaphic functionality of arable soils in tillage. Seasonal soil tool interactions disrupt the pristine bio-physio-mechanical characteristics of agricultural soils and crop-oriented ecological functions. They interfere with the natural balancing of nutrient cycles, soil carbon, and diverse organic matter that supports soil ecosystem interactions with crop rooting. We review soil working in tillage, associated mechanistic perturbations, and the edaphic response of affected soil properties towards cropping characteristics and behavior as soil working tools evolve. This is to further credit or discredit the global transition to minimum and no-till systems with a more specific characterization to soil properties and edaphic crop-oriented goals of soil tooling. Research has shown that improvement in adoption of conservation tillage is trying to characterize tilled soils with edaphic states of native soil agroecosystems rendering promising strategies to revive overworked soils under the changing climate. Soil can proliferate without disturbance whilst generation of new ecologically rich soil structures develops under more natural conditions. Researchers have argued that crops adapted to the altered physio-mechanical properties of cultivated soils can be developed and domesticated, especially under already impedance induced, mechanically risked, degraded soils. Interestingly edaphic response of soils under no-till soil working appeared less favorable in humid climates and more significant under arid regions. We recommend further studies to elucidate the association between soil health state, soil disturbance, cropping performance, and yield under evolving soil working tools, a perspective that will be useful in guiding the establishment of future soils for future crops.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Engineering (miscellaneous),Horticulture,Food Science,Agronomy and Crop Science

Reference154 articles.

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3. Jarvis, P.E., and Woolford, A.E. (2021, December 15). Economic and Ecological Benefits of Reduced Tillage in the UK. Frank Parkinson Agricultural Trust, Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust. Available online: https://www.agricology.co.uk/sites/default/files/Economic%20and%20ecological%20benefits%20of%20reduced%20tillage%20in%20the%20Uk%20-%20Final.pdf.

4. Main edaphic and climatic variables explaining soybean yield in Argiudolls under no-tilled systems;Bacigaluppo;Eur. J. Agron.,2011

5. Natural and managed soil structure: On the fragile scaffolding for soil functioning;Or;Soil Tillage Res.,2021

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