Abstract: | The soil porespace was studied in two long-term tillage experiments on two clayey stagnogleys in Southern England. The soils differed in respect of mineral and organic composition and previous management history. In both soils the total volume of pores and the volume fraction of macropores in the topsoil horizon declined with direct drilling compared with annual ploughing. This difference between tillage treatments appeared to develop more slowly in the soil that was formerly under continuous arable cultivation than in the soil that was previously in long-term grassland. Fluid transport coefficients were greater in ploughed topsoil in both soils; however, at the boundaries between topsoil and subsoil, and in the upper subsoil, permeability and gaseous diffusivity were greater after direct drilling. At a long-term arable site, soil was more consolidated below the depth of ploughing or shallow tillage, whereas in a former grassland soil ploughing disrupted the continuity of channel-type macropores. |