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Soil and Water Loss from Conservation Tillage Systems

Published by the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, St. Joseph, Michigan www.asabe.org

Citation:  Transactions of the ASAE. 21 (5): 0881-0885. (doi: 10.13031/2013.35407) @1978
Authors:   J. M. Laflen, J. L. Baker, R. O. Hartwig, W. F. Buchele, H. P. Johnson
Keywords:   

ABSTRACT A rainfall simulator was used to evaluate the effects of six different tillage practices on soil and water losses from continuous corn for three soils in Iowa. Soil loss decreased as tillage decreased. Percent of soil covered by corn residue explained between 78 and 89 percent of the variance in erosion among tillage systems. The effect of non-uniformly distributed corn residue on controlling erosion was greater than expected based on a published mulch factor. Runoff amounts decreased as residue cover increased for two of the three soils studied. No critical slope length limits were found for the tillage practices, soils, slopes, and slope lengths studied except for till-planting on the Ida soil. As sediment concentra-tions increased, mean sediment size increased for one soil, decreased for a second soil, and was unrelated to sediment concentration for the third soil.

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