USDA.gov
Agspace Masthead
  HomeAbout AgSpaceNewsCurrent ProjectsagricolaHelpContact Us
 Search National Agricultural Library
 
advanced search
search tips
browse by subject
Submit to AgSpace
usda
Browse by subject
updates
profile
 
Please use this persistent URL to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10113/9956 ◀ bookmark this

Files in This Item:

File SizeFormat
IND22059725.pdf274KbAdobe PDFView/Open
Title: Soil organic C and N pools under long-term pasture management in the Southern Piedmont USA.
Authors: Franzleubbers, A.J.
Stuedemann, J.A.
Schomberg, H.H.
Wilkinson, S.R.
USDA, ARS
Source: Soil biology & biochemistry. Apr 2000. v. 32 (4), p. 469-478.
NALT Subjects: pastures
range management
grazing
botanical composition
age
land use
soil organic matter
carbon
nitrogen
soil microorganisms
biomass
grassland soils
forest soils
agricultural soils
Georgia
Other Subjects: land use history
soil carbon pools
stand age
soil nitrogen pools
haymaking
comparisons
Issue Date: Apr-2000
Abstract: Soil organic matter pools under contrasting long-term management systems provide insight into potentials for sequestering soil C, sustaining soil fertility and functioning of the soil-atmospheric interface. We compared soil C and N pools (total, particulate and microbial) under pastures (1) varying due to harvest technique (grazing or haying), species composition (cool- or warm-season), stand age and previous land use and (2) in comparison with other land uses. Grazed tall fescue-common bermudagrass pasture (20 yr old) had greater soil organic C (31%), particulate organic C (66%), particulate organic N (2.4 fold) and soil microbial biomass C (28%) at a depth of 0-200 mm than adjacent land in conservation-tillage cropland (24 yr old). Soil organic C and total N at a depth of 0-200 mm averaged 3800 and 294 g m-2, respectively, under grazed bermudagrass and 3112 and 219 g m-2, respectively, under hayed bermudagrass. A chronosequence of grazed tall fescue suggested soil organic N sequestration rates of 7.3, 4.4 and 0.6 g m-2 yr-1 to a depth of 200 mm during 0-10, 10-30 and 30-50 yr, respectively. Soil C storage under long-term grazed tall fescue was 85 to 88% of that under forest, whereas soil N storage was 77 to 90% greater under grazed tall fescue than under forest. Properly grazed pastures in the Southern Piedmont USA have great potential to restore natural soil fertility, sequester soil organic C and N and increase soil biological activity.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/9956
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

Files in This Item:

File SizeFormat
IND22059725.pdf274KbAdobe PDFView/Open

--------- --------- ----------------


Powered by DSpace

 DDR Home | AgSpace Home | NAL Home | USDA | ARS | Science.gov | GPO Access | Policies and Links | FOIA | NAL Thesaurus
Accessibility Statement | Privacy Policy | Non-Discrimination Statement | Information Quality | USA.gov | White House