Soil and plant responses to controlled traffic farming in Switzerland

Autores/as

  • Thomas Anken Agroscope Research Station, Taenikon, 8356 Ettenhausen, Switzerland.
  • Martin Holpp Agroscope Research Station, Taenikon, 8356 Ettenhausen, Switzerland.
  • Jan Rek Agroscope Research Station, Reckenholzstr. 191, 8046 Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Peter Weisskopf Agroscope Research Station, Reckenholzstr. 191, 8046 Zurich, Switzerland.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31285/AGRO.16.680

Palabras clave:

no-till, soil compaction, plant development, controlled traffic farming

Resumen

A long-term tillage experiment in Tänikon, Switzerland showed that compared to ploughed plots, untilled plots developed a compact soil structure with decreased porosity and a trend towards lower oxygen concentration in the soil air. All these factors resulted in lower plant yields. To investigate the influence of wheeling on these plots, the shallow-tilled plots were converted to controlled traffic farming (CTF) with no-tillage in 2008. The hypothesis is that a sustainable improvement in soil structure and plant development is achievable in areas with no traffic. In a field trial with four repeated blocks, ‘CTF no-tillage’ was compared with ‘random trafficked mouldboard ploughing’ and ‘random trafficked no-tillage’. The crop rotation was winter wheat – winter barley – meadow, established on luvisol (23% clay, 34% silt, 42% sand) with an annual rainfall of 1190mm and an average annual temperature of 8.4 °C. An intensive monitoring programme was set up for various parameters: Soil-surface-level changes, penetration resistance, macropore volume, soil-air composition, matric potential, volumetric soil-water content, emergence rate, intermediate harvests and harvest yield. Results for 2008 to 2011 show that traffic has a clearly negative impact on soil structure in all variants, even when wheelings are done with low tyre-inflation pressure. Traffic-induced soil-surface-level changes were small, but nonetheless affected the soil’s physical parameters. Soil penetration resistance is higher and soil oxygen content after precipitations lower in the trafficked areas than in traffic-free zones. Yield effects were not as pronounced as in other published field trials. CTF and no-tillage achieved approximately the same yield levels, but routine ploughing resulted in the highest yields. CTF leads to a certain improvement in the soil structure, but the plant response showed that more improvement is necessary to optimise yields.

Descargas

Los datos de descargas todavía no están disponibles.

Descargas

Publicado

2012-12-01

Cómo citar

1.
Anken T, Holpp M, Rek J, Weisskopf P. Soil and plant responses to controlled traffic farming in Switzerland. Agrocienc Urug [Internet]. 1 de diciembre de 2012 [citado 17 de octubre de 2025];16(3):255-60. Disponible en: https://agrocienciauruguay.uy/index.php/agrociencia/article/view/680

Número

Sección

Soil compaction measurement and management
QR Code

Métricas

Estadísticas de artículo
Vistas de resúmenes
Vistas de PDF
Descargas de PDF
Vistas de HTML
Otras vistas