Document Details

No-tillage and high-residue practices reduce soil water evaporation

Jon F. Wroble, Wesley W. Wallender, Purnendu N. Singh, Robert Roy, Daniel S. Munk, Jeffrey P. Mitchell, William R. Horwath, Philip Hogan, Blaine R. Hanson | April 1st, 2012


Reducing tillage and maintaining crop residues on the soil surface could improve the water use efficiency of California crop production. In two field studies comparing no-tillage with standard tillage operations (following wheat silage harvest and before corn seeding), we estimated that 0.89 and 0.97 inches more water was retained in the no-tillage soil than in the tilled soil. In three field studies on residue coverage, we recorded that about 0.56, 0.58 and 0.42 inches more water was retained in residue-covered soil than in bare soil following 6 to 7 days of overhead sprinkler irrigation. Assuming a seasonal crop evapotranspiration demand of 30 inches, coupling no-tillage with practices preserving high residues could reduce summer soil evaporative losses by about 4 inches (13%). However, practical factors, including the need for different equipment and management approaches, will need to be considered before adopting these practices.

Keywords

agriculture water use and efficiency