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Perennial Grass Bioenergy Cropping on Wet Marginal Land: Impacts on Soil Properties,Soil Organic Carbon,and Biomass During Initial Establishment
Authors:Srabani Das  Karin Teuffer  Cathelijne R. Stoof  Michael F. Walter  M. Todd Walter  Tammo S. Steenhuis  Brian K. Richards
Affiliation:1.Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering,Cornell University, Riley Robb Hall,Ithaca,USA;2.Soil Geography and Landscape Group,Wageningen University,Wageningen,The Netherlands
Abstract:The control of soil moisture, vegetation type, and prior land use on soil health parameters of perennial grass cropping systems on marginal lands is not well known. A fallow wetness-prone marginal site in New York (USA) was converted to perennial grass bioenergy feedstock production. Quadruplicate treatments were fallow control, reed canarygrass (Phalaris arundinaceae L. Bellevue) with nitrogen (N) fertilizer (75 kg N ha?1), switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L. Shawnee), and switchgrass with N fertilizer (75 kg N ha?1). Based on periodic soil water measurements, permanent sampling locations were assigned to various wetness groups. Surface (0–15 cm) soil organic carbon (SOC), active carbon, wet aggregate stability, pH, total nitrogen (TN), root biomass, and harvested aboveground biomass were measured annually (2011–2014). Multi-year decreases in SOC, wet aggregate stability, and pH followed plowing in 2011. For all years, wettest soils had the greatest SOC and active carbon, while driest soils had the greatest wet aggregate stability and lowest pH. In 2014, wettest soils had significantly (p??1) were 121% greater than the three wettest switchgrass (no N) treatments. Overall, soil moisture status must be accounted for when assessing soil dynamics during feedstock establishment.
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