Cover Crops and Soil Ecosystem Services

eBook - ASA, CSSA, and SSSA Books

115,99 €
(inkl. MwSt.)
E-Book Download

Download

Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9780891186410
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 256 S., 9.06 MB
Auflage: 1. Auflage 2023
E-Book
Format: EPUB
DRM: Adobe DRM

Beschreibung

Cover Crops and Soil Ecosystem Services

A comprehensive resource on cover crops and their role in soil ecosystems

Cover crops are a reemerging strategy to improve and maintain the services that soils provide. They can have an enormous affect on agricultural outcomes, preventing soil erosion, restoring vital soil nutrients, sequestering C from the atmosphere, and more. The successful management and use of cover crops is therefore critical to ensure soil ecosystem services are maintained or improved not only to meet our demands for food, fuel, fiber, and feed but also to reduce pollution and improve the soil.

Cover Crops and Soil Ecosystem Services provides a heavily researched and highly readable introduction to cover crops and their role in soil ecosystems. It ranges from a detailed discussion of cover crop biomass production to a thorough treatment of soil ecosystems and their vulnerabilities. The result is an essential guide to a critical area of agricultural science.

Cover Crops and Soil Ecosystem Services readers will also find: Detailed treatment of cover crop biomass production, soil erosion, greenhouse gas fluxes, nitrate leaching, soil C sequestration, and more Discussion of emerging issues, including extreme weather events and the economics of cover crop farming Wide-ranging summaries of interdisciplinary soil and cover crop research

Cover Crops and Soil Ecosystem Services is a useful reference for students and researchers at all levels of study relating to cover crop agriculture.

Autorenportrait

Humberto Blancois Professor of Soil Management and Applied Soil Physics in the Department of Agronomy and Horticulture, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE, USA.

Inhalt

Preface xii

1 Cover Crops and Soil Ecosystem Services 1

1.1 Cover Crops 1

1.2 Soil Ecosystem Services 4

1.3 Cover Crops and Soil Ecosystem Services 6

1.4 Summary 8

References 9

2 Cover Crop Biomass Production 12

2.1 Cover Crops and Biomass 12

2.2 Aboveground Biomass Production 13

2.2.1 Temperate Regions 13

2.2.2 Semiarid Temperate Regions 14

2.2.3 Tropical and Subtropical Regions 15

2.3 Belowground Biomass Production 17

2.4 Threshold Level of Biomass Production 18

2.5 Management Practices that Affect Biomass Production 18

2.5.1 Planting Early 19

2.5.1.1 Interseeding 19

2.5.1.2 Planting after Summer Crop Harvest 21

2.5.1.3 Planting after Corn Silage or Short- Growing Season Crop Harvest 23

2.5.2 Terminating Late 23

2.5.3 Cover Crop Mixes 25

2.5.4 Seeding Rate 26

2.5.5 Planting Method 26

2.5.6 Tillage and Cropping Systems 27

2.5.7 Soil Texture and Number of Years in Cover Crops 28

2.5.8 Irrigation and Fertilization 28

2.6 Summary 29

References 30

3 Soil Health 35

3.1 Soil Health 35

3.2 Cover Crops and Soil Health 37

3.2.1 Soil Physical Properties 37

3.2.1.1 Soil Compaction 37

3.2.1.2 Soil Structure 39

3.2.1.3 Water Infiltration 40

3.2.1.4 Temperature 42

3.2.2 Soil Chemical Properties 42

3.2.3 Soil Biological Properties 43

3.2.3.1 Microorganisms 44

3.2.3.2 Macroorganisms 45

3.3 Interconnectedness of Soil Health Parameters 47

3.4 Managing Soil Health 47

3.4.1 Biomass Production 48

3.4.2 Time after Cover Crop Introduction 48

3.4.3 Cover Crop Species and Mixes 49

3.4.4 Tillage System 50

3.4.5 Initial Soil Condition 51

3.5 Summary 51

References 52

4 Water Erosion 58

4.1 Overview 58

4.2 Runoff 59

4.3 Sediment Loss 62

4.4 Nutrient Loss 63

4.5 Soil Carbon Loss 63

4.6 A Leading Factor of Water Erosion: Biomass Production 64

4.7 Cover Crops and Erosion- Prone Systems 65

4.7.1 Low- Biomass Producing Cropping Systems 66

4.7.2 Corn Silage and Seed Corn 66

4.7.3 Crop Residue Removal 68

4.7.4 Orchard Crops 68

4.8 Summary 69

References 69

5 Wind Erosion 73

5.1 Extent of Wind Erosion 73

5.2 Soil Loss 74

5.3 Soil Erodibility 76

5.4 Managing Wind Erosion 78

5.4.1 Biomass Production 78

5.4.2 Cover Crop Species 79

5.4.3 Growth Stage and Seeding Rate 80

5.4.4 Crop and Tillage Systems 81

5.4.5 Climate 82

5.5 Summary 82

References 83

6 Nutrient Losses 85

6.1 Implications of Nutrient Losses 85

6.2 Nutrient Leaching 86

6.3 Dissolved Nutrients in Runoff 89

6.4 Nutrient Release from Cover Crops 90

6.5 Management Implications 92

6.6 Nutrient Stratification 93

6.7 Summary 94

References 94

7 Soil Gas Emissions 97

7.1 Carbon and Nitrogen Emissions 97

7.2 Carbon Dioxide 98

7.3 Nitrous Oxide 99

7.4 Methane 100

7.5 Factors Affecting Soil Gas Emissions 100

7.5.1 Cover Crop Species 101

7.5.2 Biomass Production 102

7.5.3 Nitrogen Fertilization 103

7.5.4 Tillage and Cropping System 104

7.5.5 Measurement Time 105

7.5.6 Soil Texture and Climate 106

7.6 Summary 106

References 107

8 Carbon Sequestration 109

8.1 The Need for Carbon Sequestration 109

8.2 Rates of Carbon Sequestration 110

8.3 Topsoil Versus Subsoil Carbon Sequestration 112

8.4 Managing Carbon Sequestration 114

8.4.1 Biomass Production 114

8.4.2 Cover Crop Species and Mixes 116

8.4.3 Years after Cover Crop Adoption 117

8.4.4 Initial Soil Carbon Level 118

8.4.5 Tillage Systems 119

8.4.6 Soil Texture 120

8.4.7 Topographic Characteristics 120

8.4.8 Climate 121

8.5 Cropping System Carbon Footprint 122

8.6 Strategies to Enhance Cover Crop Potential to Sequester Carbon 122

8.7 Summary 124

References 125

9 Soil Water 128

9.1 Soil Water Management 128

9.2 High Precipitation Regions 129

9.3 Low Precipitation Regions 129

9.4 Mechanisms of Soil Water Storage with Cover Crops 132

9.5 Water Management 134

9.5.1 Biomass Production 135

9.5.2 Timing of Cover Crop Termination 136

9.5.3 Tillage System 136

9.5.4 Soil Texture 137

9.6 Summary 138

References 138

10 Weed Management 141

10.1 Cover Crops and Weeds 141

10.2 Weed Suppression 142

10.3 Managing Weeds 144

10.3.1 Biomass Production and Surface Cover 145

10.3.2 Cover Crop Species and Mixes 146

10.3.3 Tillage System 148

10.3.4 Climate 148

10.4 Summary 149

References 150

11 Soil Fertility 151

11.1 Soil Fertility Management 151

11.2 Organic Matter 152

11.2.1 Nitrogen 154

11.2.2 Nitrogen Scavenging 154

11.2.3 Reduction of Nitrogen Losses 154

11.2.4 Nitrogen Fixation 155

11.3 Phosphorus 156

11.4 Other Nutrients 158

11.5 Soil pH 158

11.6 Cation Exchange Capacity 160

11.7 Carbon to Nitrogen Ratio 161

11.8 Summary 163

References 163

12 Crop Yields 167

12.1 Multi- functionality of Cover Crops 167

12.2 Crop Yields 168

12.3 Climate 169

12.3.1 Cool and Warm Climates 169

12.3.2 Water- Limited Regions 169

12.4 Factors Affecting Crop Production 170

12.4.1 Cover Crop Species 170

12.4.2 Nitrogen Fertilization 171

12.4.3 Biomass Production 171

12.4.4 Planting Time and Method 172

12.4.5 Termination Timing 174

12.4.6 Cover Crop Mixes 174

12.4.7 Years after Cover Crop Adoption 175

12.4.8 Tillage Systems 176

12.4.9 Soil Texture 176

12.5 Summary 177

References 177

13 Grazing and Harvesting 180

13.1 Cover Crop Biomass Removal 180

13.2 Grazing 181

13.2.1 Soil Compaction 181

13.2.2 Water Infiltration 184

13.2.3 Soil Carbon Dynamics and Sequestration 185

13.2.4 Crop Yields 186

13.3 Minimizing Potential Grazing Impacts 187

13.3.1 Amount of Biomass Removal 188

13.3.2 Stocking Rate 189

13.3.3 Years under Grazing 189

13.3.4 Tillage 190

13.3.5 Soil Water Content 190

13.4 Harvesting 191

13.5 Grazing and Harvesting: An Added Benefit from Cover Crops? 193

13.6 Summary 194

References 194

14 Economics 197

14.1 Cover Crops and Farm Profits 197

14.2 Economic Analysis 198

14.2.1 Grazing and Harvesting 199

14.2.2 Weed Suppression 201

14.2.3 Nitrogen Credit 202

14.2.4 Soil Carbon Credit 203

14.2.5 Crop Residue Harvesting 204

14.2.6 Valuation of Other Ecosystem Services 204

14.3 Site- Specificity of Economic Benefits 205

14.4 Summary 206

References 206

15 Adaptation to Extreme Weather 210

15.1 Extreme Weather Events 210

15.2 Droughts 211

15.3 Floods 212

15.4 Precipitation Extremes 214

15.5 Dust Storms 217

15.6 Temperature Extremes 217

15.7 Soil Resilience 218

15.8 Summary 220

References 221

16 Opportunities, Challenges, and Future of Cover Crops 224

16.1 Opportunities 224

16.1.1 Ecosystem Services 224

16.1.2 Biomass Production 227

16.1.3 Economics 228

16.1.4 Fluctuating Climates 229

16.2 Challenges 229

16.2.1 Ecosystem Services 230

16.2.1.1 Biomass Production 230

16.2.1.2 Soil Properties 231

16.2.1.3 Carbon Sequestration 232

16.2.1.4 Dissolved Nutrients 232

16.2.1.5 Crop Yields 233

16.2.1.6 Economics 233

16.2.1.7 Fluctuating Climates 234

16.3 Remaining Questions 234

16.4 The Future of Cover Crops 236

16.5 Summary 237

References 238

Appendix I: Common and Scientific Names Used in the Book 241

Informationen zu E-Books

Herzlichen Glückwunsch zum Kauf eines Ebooks bei der BUCHBOX! Hier nun ein paar praktische Infos.

Adobe-ID

Hast du E-Books mit einem Kopierschutz (DRM) erworben, benötigst du dazu immer eine Adobe-ID. Bitte klicke einfach hier und trage dort Namen, Mailadresse und ein selbstgewähltes Passwort ein. Die Kombination von Mailadresse und Passwort ist deine Adobe-ID. Notiere sie dir bitte sorgfältig. 
 
Achtung: Wenn du kopiergeschützte E-Books OHNE Vergabe einer Adobe-ID herunterlädst, kannst du diese niemals auf einem anderen Gerät außer auf deinem PC lesen!!
 
Du hast dein Passwort zur Adobe-ID vergessen? Dann kannst du dies HIER neu beantragen.
 
 

Lesen auf dem Tablet oder Handy

Wenn du auf deinem Tablet lesen möchtest, verwende eine dafür geeignete App. 

Für iPad oder Iphone etc. hole dir im iTunes-Store die Lese-App Bluefire

Für Android-Geräte (z.B. Samsung) bekommst du die Lese-App Bluefire im GooglePlay-Store (oder auch: Aldiko)
 
Lesen auf einem E-Book-Reader oder am PC / MAC
 
Um die Dateien auf deinen PC herunter zu laden und auf dein E-Book-Lesegerät zu übertragen gibt es die Software ADE (Adobe Digital Editions).
 
 

Andere Geräte / Software

 

Kindle von Amazon. Wir empfehlen diese Geräte NICHT.

EPUB mit Adobe-DRM können nicht mit einem Kindle von Amazon gelesen werden. Weder das Dateiformat EPUB, noch der Kopierschutz Adobe-DRM sind mit dem Kindle kompatibel. Umgekehrt können alle bei Amazon gekauften E-Books nur auf dem Gerät von Amazon gelesen werden. Lesegeräte wie der Tolino sind im Gegensatz hierzu völlig frei: Du kannst bei vielen tausend Buchhandlungen online Ebooks für den Tolino kaufen. Zum Beispiel hier bei uns.

Software für Sony-E-Book-Reader

Wenn du einen Sony-Reader hast, dann findest du hier noch die zusätzliche Sony-Software.
 

Computer/Laptop mit Unix oder Linux

Die Software Adobe Digital Editions ist mit Unix und Linux nicht kompatibel. Mit einer WINE-Virtualisierung kommst du aber dennoch an deine E-Books.