GREATER SOIL WATER HARVESTING AND CROP YIELDS WITH NO-TILL AND CROP-RESIDUE RETENTION
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Date
2023
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Publisher
CEP USM
Abstract
Global heating is already impacting agriculture across the steppes.
Increasing temperatures and capricious rainfall are aggravating problems related to soil
health, loss of soil fertility, soil erosion and compaction. The industrial model of
agricultural intensification has brought no relief: rather, intensive ploughing has
decimated soil organic matter and soil structure, cutting infiltration and water retention
capacity while encouraging soil erosion and compaction. Sustainability requires a new
strategy based on Conservation Agriculture but, because CA has been largely a
farmers’ movement, systematic research has been lagging. A long-term no-till field
experiment on the Typical Chernozem of the Bălţi Steppe, in Moldova, demonstrates
the influence of different rates of crop residues on soil water accumulation and yields
of winter barley following corn-for-grain.
Description
CEBANU, D. Greater soil water harvesting and crop yields with no-till and crop-residue retention. In: Plant Protection - Achievements and Perspectives: scientific international symposium, Chisinau, October 2-3, 2023. CEP USM, 2023. pp.112-121. ISBN 978-9975-62-563-0. DOI:https://doi.org/10.53040/ppap2023.19.
Keywords
Climate change, drought, conservation agriculture, crop residues
Citation
CEBANU, D. Greater soil water harvesting and crop yields with no-till and crop-residue retention. In: Plant Protection - Achievements and Perspectives: scientific international symposium, Chisinau, October 2-3, 2023. CEP USM, 2023. pp.112-121. ISBN 978-9975-62-563-0. DOI:https://doi.org/10.53040/ppap2023.19.