Results 311 to 320 of about 70,284 (338)
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Power Tillage Compared with Conventional Tillage Tools for Grassland Renovation

Transactions of the ASAE, 1979
ABSTRACT Eight randomized block experiments were conducted to compare a power tillage renovation seeder with a conventional technique for grassland renovation. The power tillage renovation seeder required about one fifth as much tractor fuel as a conventional technique. The field capacity with the power tillage renovation seeder was about six times the
null E. M. Smith, null Gerald Benock
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Growth Analysis of Soybean under No‐Tillage and Conventional Tillage Systems

Agronomy Journal, 1999
Soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merrill] plants grown with no‐tillage (NT) often appear smaller than those grown with conventional tillage (CT), yet they produce similar grain yield. Our objective was to test the hypothesis that the early‐season growth depression is offset by compensatory growth and changes in plant development.
Raji I. Yusuf   +2 more
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Allelochemicals in soil from no-tillage versus conventional-tillage wheat (Triticum aestivum) fields

Journal of Chemical Ecology, 1990
Putative allelochemicals found in the soil of no-tillage and conventional-tillage wheat plots near Stillwater, Oklahoma, were obtained by a mild alkaline aqueous extraction procedure, bioassayed to determine their biological activity, purified, and analyzed with a capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry-data analysis system. The most significant
K G, Cast   +4 more
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Barley, Soybean and Maize Production using Ridge Tillage, No-Tillage and Conventional Tillage in North-East Italy

Journal of Agricultural Engineering Research, 1995
Abstract Ridge tillage can be considered as an alternative to no-tillage in climates and environments which are not very favourable for the latter. It has been conceived almost exclusively for crops such as maize and soybean and this creates difficulties if small grains are introduced into a rotation based on the ridge tillage system.
BORIN, MAURIZIO, SARTORI, LUIGI
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Effect of Conventional Tillage and Zero Tillage on Different Soil and Yield Parameters

Journal of Agriculture Research and Technology, 2022
Conservation and conventional tillage directly affects soil environment for crop production. Conservation tillage provides a layer of crop residue which increases soil fertility, soil erosion, leaching of fertilizer, pesticides and herbicides into the ground water.
Sushil Kumar   +4 more
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Double Cropping Systems Involving No‐Tillage and Conventional Tillage1

Agronomy Journal, 1973
AbstractThis study was prompted by the huge feed grain deficits which increase annually in the Southeast. The need exists to find ways of increasing grain production efficiently. Cropping‐tillage systems designed to accomplish this were studied. Soybeans [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] and grain sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench.] were double cropped ...
J. O. Sanford   +2 more
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Water Infiltration Under No-tillage, Minimum Tillage and Conventional Tillage Systems on a Sandy Loam Alfisols

2004, Ottawa, Canada August 1 - 4, 2004, 2004
A study was conducted on a tropical Alfisols on the Teaching and Research Farms of University of Ibadan in order to determine the effect of three tillage (no-tillage, minimum and conventional tillage) systems on infiltration of water in the soil. The experiment was a split-plot design with three replications.
null J.O. Akinyemi, null A.O. Adedeji
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SOIL MICROARTHROPODS IN LONG-TERM NO-TILLAGE AND CONVENTIONAL TILLAGE CORN PRODUCTION

Canadian Journal of Soil Science, 1990
Cultivation is known to reduce the number and diversity of microarthropod (Acarina and Collembola) populations from levels observed under natural forest or grassland vegetation. Under no-tillage crop production, the soil remains relatively undisturbed and plant litter decomposes at the soil surface, much like in natural soil ecosystems.
J. P. WINTER   +2 more
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Effects of Conventional Tillage and Conservation Tillage on Soil Organic Carbon

Advanced Materials Research, 2013
For the last decades, because of increasing attention to global change, the carbon cycle in the terrestrial ecosystem has become a hotspot problem for every country. It has 1.6 Pg/a C to release into atmosphere because of the irrational land-use, quickening the step of global warming trend. But agricultural soil has the double-sword effects.
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Wheel Traffic Placement Effects on Corn Response under No‐Tillage and Conventional Tillage

Journal of Production Agriculture, 1996
Although previous studies on the Del‐Mar‐Va peninsula have indicated that vehicular wheel traffic from small scale farm equipment (<5 tons/axle) does not result in soil conditions considered detrimental to plant growth under no‐tillage (NT) and conventional tillage (CT) management, farmers are still concerned that decreased plant response and ...
T. Tsegaye, R. L. Hill
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