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Library Furrow diking in conservation tillage

Furrow diking in conservation tillage

Furrow diking in conservation tillage

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2010
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201301816472
Pages
835-840

Crop production in the Southeastern U.S. can be limited by water; thus, supplemental irrigation is needed to sustain profitable crop production. Increased water capture would efficiently improve water use and reduce supplemental irrigation amounts/costs, thus improving producer's profit margin. We quantified infiltration (INF), runoff (R), and sediment (E) losses from furrow diked (+DT) and non-furrow diked (−DT) tilled conventional (CT) and strip tillage (ST) systems. In 2008, a field study (Tifton loamy sand, Typic Kandiudult) was established with DT, ST, and CT systems. In 2009, a field study (Faceville loamy sand, Typic Kandiudult) was established with DT and ST systems. Treatments (6) included: CT−DT, CT+DT, ST₁ (1-year old)−DT, ST₁ +DT, ST₁₀ (10-year old)−DT, and ST₁₀ +DT. Simulated rainfall (50mmh⁻¹ for 1h) was applied to each 2-m×3-m plots (n =3). Runoff and E were measured from each 6-m² plot. ST₁ +DT plots had 80-88% less R than ST₁ −DT plots. Any disturbance associated with DT in ST₁ systems did not negatively impact E values. For both soils, CT−DT plots represented the worst-case scenario in terms of measured R and E; ST+DT plots represented the best-case scenario. Trends for R, E, and estimated plant available water (PAW) values decreased in order of CT−DT, CT+DT, ST₁ −DT, ST₁ +DT, ST₁₀ −DT, and ST₁₀ +DT treatments. From a hydrology standpoint, ST₁ −DT plots behaved more similarly to CT plots than to other ST plots; from a sediment standpoint, ST₁ −DT plots behaved more similarly to other ST plots than to CT plots. DT had no effect on ST₁₀ plots. CT−DT and ST₁₀ +DT plots resulted in 5.9 (worst-case) and 8.1 (best-case) days of water for crop use, a difference of 2.2 days of water for crop use or 37%. Compared to the CT−DT treatment, an agricultural field managed to CT+DT, ST₁ −DT, ST₁ +DT, ST₁₀ −DT, and ST₁₀ +DT would save a producer farming the CT−DT field $5.30, $9.42, $13.55, $14.14, and $14.14ha⁻¹, respectively, to pump the amount of water lost to R and not saved as INF back onto the field. The most water/cost savings occurred for CT and ST₁ plots as a result of DT. Savings for CT+DT, ST₁ −DT, and ST₁ +DT treatments represent 27%, 47%, and 68% of the cost of DT ($20ha⁻¹) and 37%, 67%, and 96% of the savings a producer would have if managing the field to ST for 10 years without DT (ST₁₀ −DT) in a single 50-mm rainfall event. For row-crop producers in the Southeastern U.S. with runoff producing rainfall events during the crop growing season, DT is a management practice that is cost-effective from a natural resource and financial standpoint for those producers that continue to use CT systems and especially those that have recently adopted ST systems into their farming operations.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Truman, C.C.
Nuti, R.C.

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