Soil–Plant Relationships in Soybean Cultivated under Crop Rotation after 17 Years of No-Tillage and Occasional Chiseling [PDF]
No-tillage cover crops contribute to better soil quality, being able to replace mechanized tillage management. This observation can only be made after several years of adopting conservationist practices and through research on soil–plant relationships ...
Gustavo Ferreira da Silva +9 more
doaj +2 more sources
Temporary effect of chiseling on the compaction of a Rhodic Hapludox under no-tillage [PDF]
Mechanical chiseling has been used to alleviate the effects of compaction in soils under no-tillage (NT). However, its effect on the soil physical properties does not seem to have a defined duration period.
Sâmala Glícia Carneiro Silva +4 more
doaj +2 more sources
Mechanical and Hydric Stress Effects on Maize Root System Development at Different Soil Compaction Levels [PDF]
Soil mechanical resistance, aeration, and water availability directly affect plant root growth. The objective of this work was to identify the contribution of mechanical and hydric stresses on maize root elongation, by modeling root growth while taking ...
Moacir Tuzzin de Moraes +6 more
doaj +2 more sources
Soybean off-season management practices: impacts on physical and chemical soil properties and crop yield [PDF]
Off-season crops diversification and gypsum under minimal tillage can improve soil fertility and reduce soil compaction. The objective of this work was to evaluate changes on soil physical and chemical properties and soybean yield grown over off-season ...
Esmael Lopes dos Santos +5 more
doaj +1 more source
Soil compaction is a main physical problem in many growing areas. The use of ground cover crops for soil decompaction has been a subject of many studies. That has promising results both used alone and in association with mechanical chiseling.
Cleudson Michelon +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Mechanical Chiseling and the Cover Crop Effect on the Common Bean Yield in the Brazilian Cerrado
Core Ideas: (1) Superficial soil compaction in a no-tillage system. (2) Cultivation of cover crops in succession with annual crops. (3) Soil decompression with cultivation of the predecessor soil cover. (4) Unpacking soil with mechanical chiseling.
Vagner do Nascimento +11 more
doaj +1 more source
OPTIMUM WATER RANGE AND LOAD-BEARING CAPACITY IN SOIL MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS, STRAW REMAINING, AND CHISELING IN SUGARCANE [PDF]
Sugarcane requires planning aimed at maintaining production levels, technological quality, and longevity of the sugarcane field, as it is a semi-perennial crop.
Michele da S. Gomes +4 more
doaj +1 more source
AGRONOMICAL ATTRIBUTES OF SOYBEANS AND SOIL RESISTANCE TO PENETRATION IN NO-TILLAGE AND CHISELED SURFACES [PDF]
Farming systems may affect soil properties and crop production of components, decreasing yields. This study aimed to assess penetration resistance (PR) and agronomic traits of soybeans under no-tillage (NT) and chiseling (CP).
Jorge W. Cortez +4 more
doaj +1 more source
Soil fertility, nutritional status, and sugarcane yield under two systems of soil management, levels of remaining straw and chiseling of ratoons [PDF]
Conservation management practices with minimum soil mobilization, maintenance of amounts of straw in the soil, and chiseling of ratoons interrows can be beneficial to soil quality, nutrition and sugarcane yield; however, the combination of these ...
Sálvio Napoleão Soares Arcoverde +5 more
doaj +1 more source
Mechanical harvesting has increasingly been used in sugarcane production units, and it has often resulted in reduced structural quality of the soil due to soil compaction caused by machine traffic. Thus, sugarcane ratoon crops have often been chiseled to
Marcos Vinicius Garbiate +4 more
doaj +1 more source

