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Majid Dekamin

Majid Dekamin

Academic rank: Assistant Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId:
HIndex:
Faculty: agriculture
Address: Plant Production and Genetic Engineering, University of Malayer, Malayer, Hamedan.
Phone:

Research

Title
Reduced tillage and residue management to enhance soil health and provide economic incentive for corn growers
Type
FinishedProject
Keywords
Carbon sequestration Chisel plow Moldboard plow Soil compaction Strip tillage Yield components
Year
2021
Researchers Majid Dekamin

Abstract

Compared to conventional tillage (CT) system (e.g. moldboard plowing (Moldboard-CT) and chisel plowing (Chisel-CT)) adoption rate of conservation tillage systems (e.g. no-till (NT) and strip-till (ST)) in surface- irrigated farms is considerably low. A three-year fild study was conducted to evaluate corn (Zea mays L) productivity in four tillage systems ranging in intensity of soil disturbance (i.e. Moldboard-CT, Chisel-CT, ST, and NT) in a furrow-irrigated fild. Averaged over three years, corn grain yield was higher in Moldboard-CT (2.9 Mg ha−1) and NT (12.1 Mg ha−1) systems than yields in Chisel-CT (10.9 Mg ha−1) and ST (10.3 Mg ha−1). Tillage system did not affect soil pH, EC, total organic carbon (TOC), and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in 0–15 soil depths under Chisel-CT, ST, and NT compared with Moldboard-CT. No signifiant differences were found between tillage systems in terms of saturated hydraulic conductivity (Kfs) and bulk density, yet soil available water capacity (AWC) and the wet aggregate stability were positively affected by adopting reduced tillage. Economic analysis showed that Return on Investment (ROI) in NT was greater (0.93) than that in CT (0.88), although net return from Moldboard-CT was $44 ha−1 greater than that of NT. The small difference in net return between Moldboard-CT and NT, along with the positive trend observed in soil properties as a result of shifting to NT, indicates the potential of NT to improve corn production sustainability in surface-irrigated agroecosystems in mid- and long-term.