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The impact, identification and management of dispersive soils in rainfed cropping systems
Author(s) -
Page Kathryn L.,
Dang Yash P.,
Dalal Ram C.,
Kopittke Peter M.,
Menzies Neal W.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
european journal of soil science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.244
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1365-2389
pISSN - 1351-0754
DOI - 10.1111/ejss.13070
Subject(s) - subsoil , soil water , environmental science , cropping , irrigation , yield gap , crop yield , agricultural engineering , agriculture , crop , rainfed agriculture , identification (biology) , agronomy , soil science , engineering , biology , ecology
Dispersive soils limit crop growth and significantly impact world food production. Although numerous reviews have examined soil dispersion, many focus on irrigated systems and fail to differentiate the approaches required for rainfed agriculture. This review seeks to fill this gap by focusing on the impact, identification and management of dispersive soils in rainfed areas. Dispersive soils can have large impacts on crop production because of their adverse physical, chemical and biological effects, with this impact particularly large in rainfed systems where irrigation water is unavailable to supplement crop water supply and assist with amelioration. However, the identification of these soils is challenging and tests that can reliably relate soil characteristics to crop performance are lacking. Recent work has found that first identifying consistently lower yielding locations (using yield mapping or proximal/remote sensing) and then using traditional soil testing to identify the potential cause/s of the yield loss may be a promising approach, although this requires refinement. Knowledge of the type of dispersive soil (e.g., saline/non‐saline, acidic/alkaline/neutral) and where constraints occur in the profile (surface or subsoil) must also be determined during identification as this will affect management approaches, particularly where multiple constraints need to be treated together to achieve yield increase. Improved understanding of how to economically use ameliorants and combine them to achieve maximum benefit in the presence of multiple constraints is needed. Greater appreciation of how to use agronomic management to improve crop growth in the presence of dispersive behaviour is also likely to increase profitability in rainfed systems where amelioration is often impractical or uneconomical. Dispersive soils are a major challenge for rainfed cropping, and so the refinement of our management approach can help improve profitability and productivity. Highlights Dispersive soils limit crop growth and significantly impact world food production We examine the impact, identification and management of dispersive soils in rainfed agriculture Improvements in the identification of dispersive soils are required to improve management Refinement of ameliorant use and agronomic management will improve profitability and productivity

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