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Effects of irrigated and dryland cultivation on soil carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus in northeastern Colorado

Date

2001

Authors

Sinton, Penelope J., author
Burke, Ingrid C., advisor
Kelly, Eugene F., committee member
Peterson, Gary A., 1940-, committee member
Lauenroth, William K., committee member

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Abstract

I investigated the effects of irrigated and fertilized com agriculture on soil C, N and P in northeastern Colorado as they compare to dryland wheat-fallow fields and native rangelands in the semiarid shortgrass steppe of northeastern Colorado. Three replicates each of native rangeland, dry land wheat-fallow, and irrigated corn fields located in or adjacent to the Pawnee National Grasslands were selected for this study. I measured potentially mineralizable C and N from 0-15cm in the soil profile, particulate organic matter (POM) C and Nin the upper 30cm, total and NaHC03-P to a depth of 105cm, and total soil C and N to a depth of 195cm in the soil profile. Irrigated corn fields contained significantly lower mineralizable, POM, and total C and N than rangelands in the upper 5cm of soil. Com fields also had significantly greater NaHCOrP content than rangelands or wheat-fallow fields to a 1-meter depth in the soil. Wheat-fallow fields had significantly less potentially mineralizable and POM C and N than rangelands or corn fields in the upper 5cm of soil. Cumulative losses of total C and N in wheat-fallow fields extended to depths of 75cm or more. There were no significant differences in total P among land use types. Differences in C and N between corn and wheat-fallow fields are likely due to differences in the quantity of plant residue inputs. The distribution of C, N and NaHC03-P through the soil profile in corn fields also differed from rangelands. Soil C, N and NaHC03-P in the soil profile of rangelands decreased from the surf ace down, whereas in com fields C, N and NaHC03-P increased from the surf ace to 30cm and then decreased. Distribution of C, N and P in corn fields may be due to leaching of C or N or decomposition changes in the soil profile. In wheat-fallow fields, C, N and NaHC03-P showed a more uniform distribution in the upper 30cm of soil than rangelands, likely due to tillage practices that mix the upper soil layers in wheat-fallow fields. These results indicate that irrigated and fertilized corn crops in this region of the semiarid shortgrass steppe depletes pools of C and N at the soil surf ace but does not cause a change in C or N below the 5cm layer of soil. The differences in amount and distribution of C and N observed in this study among dryland wheat-fallow and irrigated corn fields indicate that the type of crop grown in this region should be an important consideration for regional studies that evaluate C and N changes due to cultivation.

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Subject

Soil mineralogy -- Colorado
Irrigation farming -- Colorado
Dry farming -- Colorado

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