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Geoderma
Volume 22, Issue 4, November 1979, Pages 275-295
 
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doi:10.1016/0016-7061(79)90025-9    
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Copyright © 1979 Published by Elsevier B.V.

Effects of deep tillage and profile modification on soil properties, root growth, and crop yields in the United States and Canadastar, open

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Paul W. Ungera

aUSDA Southwestern Great Plains Research Center, Science and Education Administration, Agricultural Research, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bushland, Texas 79012 U.S.A.


Received 11 September 1978; 
accepted 12 April 1979. 
Available online 10 April 2003.

Abstract

Unfavorable conditions of soil profiles, through their adverse effects on the growth, proliferation, and activity of roots, may severely limit the yield of crops at some locations in the United States and Canada. A review of the literature showed that deep tillage and modification of soils having unfavorable profiles may increase crop production by providing larger, more favorable zones of soil for the growth, proliferation, and activity of roots. The improved conditions may result from disrupting dense, high-strength horizons; leaching or burying salts or toxic materials; increasing the capacity of sandy soils to retain water; and reducing the erodibility of soil. When the horizons causing problems were adequately disrupted or altered, yields of crops were generally increased. Benefits from the treatments were greater when precipitation or irrigation were limited than when they were adequate. There are many soils on which no benefits can be expected from deep tillage and profile modification.

star, openContribution from Agricultural Research, Science and Education Administration, USDA, in cooperation with The Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, Texas A&M University.


Geoderma
Volume 22, Issue 4, November 1979, Pages 275-295
 
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