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Research Article

Physicochemical properties and stoichiometry of Mollisols in responses to tillage and fertilizer management

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Pages 1034-1045 | Received 28 Sep 2019, Accepted 25 May 2020, Published online: 13 Jul 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Understanding the influence of tillage and fertilizer management on soil physical properties, and their roles in soil stoichiometry are critical for estimating the ecological implications of agricultural management. The study investigated the 3-yr effects of tillage and fertilizer management on soil physical properties, nutrients, and stoichiometry. The study included two tillage methods: rotary tillage (R) and deep tillage (D), with three fertilizer management: chemical fertilizer (N), chemical fertilizer + straw returning (S), chemical fertilizer + straw returning + organic fertilizer (M). Samples were collected at three depths: 0–15, 15–30, 30–50 cm. Results indicated that treatment effects were better at depth 0–30 cm than at 30–50 cm. The D significantly increased the soil C: N but decreases the C: P because nutrient fixation state was broken. The M had more effect on soil nutrient concentrations and stoichiometry. Effects of tillage and bulk density were positively correlated with soil nutrient concentrations, while moisture content and compactness were positively correlated with the soil stoichiometric ratio. Fertilizer management is the main factor to control soil nutrient and stoichiometry while using organic fertilizer under deep tillage can improve nutrients and maintain the stability of Mollisols ecosystem.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the National Key Research and Developmental Program of China [2017YFD0300502-2], partial data support from ‘National Earth System Science Data Sharing Infrastructure, National Science and Technology Infrastructure of China. (http://www.geodata.cn).’

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