Earthworm dynamics and soil physical properties in the first three years of no-till management

Autor: Karl J. Umiker, Stephen O. Guy, Jodi L. Johnson-Maynard
Rok vydání: 2007
Předmět:
Zdroj: Soil and Tillage Research. 94:338-345
ISSN: 0167-1987
Popis: Earthworms are often referred to as ecosystem engineers due to their ability to alter the soil environment. Since earthworms influence a wide range of critical chemical and physical soil properties it is important to understand how their populations are impacted by soil management. Earthworms were sampled during the spring and summer of 2001, 2002, and 2003 from conventional tillage (CT) and no-till (NT) plots established in 2000. Although there was a strong trend for higher earthworm density in NT plots in 2001 ( p = 0.08) and 2002 ( p = 0.19), statistically significant differences were not detected between tillage treatments until 2003 ( p = 0.04) when mean earthworm density was 37.7 individuals m −2 in CT and 149.9 individuals m −2 in NT during spring and 17.1 individuals m −2 in CT and 58.4 individuals m −2 in NT in summer. A high mortality rate between spring and summer, combined with greater cocoon production under NT suggests that the earthworm population turns over rapidly in NT plots. Data also suggest that adverse soil environmental conditions will limit earthworm density in these dryland agroecosystems. Despite significantly higher earthworm density after three years of NT management, soil bulk density, saturated hydraulic conductivity, and aggregate stability of the 0.5- to 1-mm size fraction were not different between the two tillage treatments. The apparent lack of impact of reduced disturbance and increased earthworm density on soil physical properties may be due to the short time this soil has been under NT management, limited seasonal earthworm activity due to environmental conditions, or differences in the scale at which soil physical properties have been affected after three years of NT management and the scale at which our measurements were made.
Databáze: OpenAIRE