Soil carbon changes resulting from sugarcane trash management at two locations in Queensland, Australia, and in North-East Brazil

Sugarcane cropping produces a large amount of crop residues, which offers considerable scope for residue management. Soil samples, collected from 2 long-term experiments in Australia and an experiment in Pernambuco State, Brazil, were analysed for total carbon (C T ) and for labile carbon (C L ) by...

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Veröffentlicht in:Australian journal of soil research 1998-01, Vol.36 (6), p.873-882
Hauptverfasser: BLAIR, G. J, CHAPMAN, L, WHITBREAD, A. M, BALL-COELHO, B, LARSEN, P, TIESSEN, H
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Sugarcane cropping produces a large amount of crop residues, which offers considerable scope for residue management. Soil samples, collected from 2 long-term experiments in Australia and an experiment in Pernambuco State, Brazil, were analysed for total carbon (C T ) and for labile carbon (C L ) by oxidation with 333 mM KMnO 4 . At the 2 locations in Australia, C T and C L concentrations were lower in the surface layer (0-1 cm) of the cropped soil compared with a nearby uncropped reference soil. Burning resulted in a greater loss in C T and C L at a depth of 0-1 cm than green cane trash management. At one of the sites, sugarcane cropping resulted in a decline in C T relative to the reference in the green trash management treatment but an increase in C L . In Brazil, trash management from one cane crop did not change C T over a 12-month period but green cane trash return increased C L . Sustainable sugarcane cropping systems must include crop residue return without burning in order to maintain an active C cycle in the system to drive nutrient cycles. Keywords: soil organic matter, labile carbon, soil nitrogen. Australian Journal of Soil Research 36(6) 873 - 882 Full text doi:10.1071/S98021 © CSIRO 1998
ISSN:0004-9573
1838-675X
1446-568X
DOI:10.1071/S98021