International Soil and Water Conservation Research (Jun 2021)

Near-saturated soil hydraulic conductivity and pore characteristics as influenced by conventional and conservation tillage practices in North-West Himalayan region, India

  • Deepak Singh,
  • Alok Kumar Mishra,
  • Sridhar Patra,
  • Sankar Mariappan,
  • Nisha Singh

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
pp. 249 – 259

Abstract

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Tillage plays an important role in modifying soil hydraulic properties. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the effect of conservation tillage practices in a maize-wheat cropping system on near-saturated soil hydraulic properties and pore characteristics in the North-West Himalayan region, India. Three treatments viz. conventional tillage (CT), minimum tillage (MT), and zero tillage (ZT) were evaluated in terms of field saturated hydraulic conductivity (ks), unsaturated hydraulic conductivity k(h), the inverse of capillary length (α), flow-weighted mean pore radius (r0), numbers of pores per square meter (n0) and water-conducting macroporosity (Ɛ). The above hydraulic conductivity and pore characteristics were derived from steady-state water flux (q) measured using hood infiltrometer at 0, −1, and −3 cm pressure head for each treatment after seven years of establishment of this tillage experiment. Results revealed significantly (p 0.50 mm conducted about 63.60, 68.01, and 75.97 % of total flow (at 0 cm pressure head) in the corresponding water-conducting macroporosity of 0.00030, 0.00044, and 0.00069 % of soil volume under CT, MT, and ZT, respectively. Overall, zero-tillage based agriculture system was found to improve near-saturated soil hydraulic properties.

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