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Assessment of tillage strategies to decrease nitrate leaching in the Brimstone Farm Experiment, Oxfordshire, UK
Authors:J A Catt  K R Howse  D G Christian  P W Lane  G L Harris  M J Goss
Institution:

a Soil Science Department, IACR, Rothamsted, Harpenden, Herts AL5 2JQ, UK

b Crop and Disease Management Department, IACR, Rothamsted, Harpenden, Herts AL5 2JQ, UK

c Statistics Department, IACR, Rothamsted, Harpenden, Herts AL5 2JQ, UK

d ADAS Gleadthorpe, Meden Vale, Mansfield, Notts NG20 9P, UK

e Centre for Land and Water Stewardship, Richards Building, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ont., Canada N1G 2W1

Abstract:Tillage may influence nitrate losses from agricultural soils. Losses of nitrate were measured in drainflow at 60 cm depth and in combined surface runoff and interflow in the A horizon (=surface layer flow) on hydrologically sealed plots with a two-year comparison (1988–1990) of shallow-tine cultivation vs. mouldboard ploughing. Ploughing increased concentrations and loadings of nitrate in drainflow and surface layer flow, especially in the first year. After these two years the shallow-tined plots were ploughed to plant winter beans (Vicia faba L.), and nitrate in drainflow then increased over the next three winters, slightly exceeding that from the plots which had been ploughed throughout for winter cereals. The composition of the surface layer flow did not show this effect, however. Calculations of net winter mineralisation of soil organic nitrogen showed that shallow-tine cultivation may have decreased mineralisation slightly compared with ploughing in the first two years. These calculations did not indicate any increase in mineralisation for two winters after the minimally cultivated plots were ploughed in autumn 1990, probably because the soil was then very dry. This increase was apparently delayed until the fifth winter (1992/1993), which was much wetter than any since autumn 1990. In the previous eight years (1980–1988) half of the plots had been ploughed and half had been direct drilled. Averaged over the five winters 1988/1989–1992/1993, the five measures of nitrate loss in drainflow from plots previously direct drilled were 6–57% more than from plots previously ploughed, and winter mineralisation was 20% more, with no evidence of any decline in either with time. The nitrate produced by mineralisation of organic matter conserved by the eight years of direct drilling was mainly lost by leaching or denitrification; it was of little or no benefit to the crops. The results suggest that in the long term more nitrate is leached from land subject to periods of minimal or zero tillage and ploughing than from land ploughed every year.
Keywords:Drainflow  Surface layer flow  Nitrate loss  Mineralisation  Leaching  Shallow tillage  Direct drilling
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