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Soil Research Soil Research Society
Soil, land care and environmental research
Soil Research

Soil Research

Volume 56 Number 2 2018

SR17157Review and outlook for agromineral research in agriculture and climate mitigation

Guanru Zhang, Jinting Kang, Tianxing Wang and Chen Zhu
pp. 113-122

Agrominerals are naturally occurring rocks and minerals that can be used for re-fertilising soils exhausted of macro- and micro-nutrients. Heightened concerns for limited world P and K resources and the potential for applying a large amount of agrominerals to mitigate global warming has renewed interest of the subject. This review highlights the state of knowledge and potential future directions.


In desert ecosystems shrubs are viewed as resource islands, oases of higher fertility in the barren landscape, supporting biota above and below the ground. While the aboveground diversity was extensively studied, little is known about the belowground communities. Therefore, communities under two dominant shrubs and in barren soil located in opposing slopes were studied, revealing that shrubs alone could be linked to changes in soil bacterial diversity and community composition.


Subsoil compaction is a serious threat to soil functions. In this study we quantified the vertical stresses in the tyre–soil contact area and at 0.3, 0.6 and 0.9 m depths of a sandy loam at field capacity. The machinery tested was a tractor–trailer system for slurry application with wheel loads up to 70 kN. The maximum stress measured at 0.3, 0.6 and 0.9 m depths was approximately 300, 100 and 45 kPa respectively. Previous studies in the experimental plots have documented persistent effects on soil properties and functions to a depth of at least 0.7 m.


The effects of sugar cane bagasse biochar and spent mushroom compost (SMC) on different phosphorus fractions and plant-available phosphorus was studied in three calcareous soils. The different P fractions were evaluated in the soil such. Application of SMC significantly increased Ca2-P in all soils compared with control, and had an increasing trend over time, but biochar only increased Ca2-P significantly in sandy loam soil. Application of SMC can enhance plant-available P and affect P fractions and distribution, with the degree of the increase being soil specific. In contrast, the effects of biochar on P availability, fractions and distribution need more time to become apparent.


Managing nitrogen supply to better match crop demand and reduce losses will be an important goal under future predicted elevated carbon dioxide conditions. Use of a nitrification inhibitor in a cereal–legume rotation may help to increase grain nitrogen concentration, increase the mobilisation of nitrogen towards the grain under elevated carbon dioxide, and may also help to compensate for decreases in grain copper concentration under elevated carbon dioxide. However, use of a nitrification inhibitor may not provide additional benefits for productivity or efficiency of nitrogen utilisation.

SR17058Digital mapping of soil erodibility for water erosion in New South Wales, Australia

Xihua Yang, Jonathan Gray, Greg Chapman, Qinggaozi Zhu, Mitch Tulau and Sally McInnes-Clarke
pp. 158-170

We assessed eight empirical methods on soil erodibility (K-factor) estimation and produced a harmonised high-resolution K-factor map for the entire state of NSW with improvements by using the recent digital soil maps (DSMs) and soil information. The modelled erodibility values were validated with field plots and further used along with other RUSLE factors to assess erosion risk which in turn provides useful information for erosion control and management.

SR16157Traditional manual tillage significantly affects soil redistribution and CO2 emission in agricultural plots on the Loess Plateau

Yan Geng, Hanqing Yu, Yong Li, Mahbubul Tarafder, Guanglong Tian and Adrian Chappell
pp. 171-181

Soil redistribution induced by traditional manual tillage can potentially affect the soil carbon cycle, but few studies have quantified soil CO2 emission under different manual tillage practices. The present study demonstrated that soil CO2 emission was reduced upslope but enhanced downslope of the tilled slopes. The results imply that subsistence farming on steep slopes using hand tools may have a large effect on regional C balance and estimates of C budgets.

SR17039Evidence for soil carbon enhancement through deeper mouldboard ploughing at pasture renovation on a Typic Fragiaqualf

R. Calvelo Pereira, M. J. Hedley, M. Camps Arbestain, P. Bishop, K. E. Enongene and I. J. J. Otene
pp. 182-191

Permanent pastures require periodic renewal (cultivation and re-sowing) to maintain their productive potential, which involves a short-term C loss. Normal cultivation (ploughing or discing) often involves only the top 10–15 cm, or less, of pasture soils. Deeper ploughing (below 20 cm; inversion tillage) at the time of renewing a permanent ryegrass plus clover-based pasture growing on an imperfectly drained Typic Fragiaqualf soil resulted in an overall increase in soil C mass to approximately 30 cm of 18%, or 13.9 Mg C ha–1, compared with not undertaking the re-grassing. This gain in soil C may be temporary but, over a period of 4 years, it significantly increased the net residence time of C in soil related to the soil inversion.


Increased atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition caused by human activities has potentially important effects on ecosystem carbon (C) dynamics. The present study investigated the differential effects of N deposition on oxidisable soil organic carbon (SOC) and its four fractions with different labilities in plant rhizospheric and bulk soils, and found that SOC in the rhizosphere became more recalcitrant at low levels (N2.8–N5.6) of N addition, but addition of high levels (N11.2–N44.8) of N resulted in accumulation of labile C that was less stable against chemical and biological degradation. This study provides a theoretical basis for increasing long-term soil C storage and the stabilising soil C pool in a changing global environment.

SR17093Changes in soil stress during repeated wheeling: A comparison of measured and simulated values

Mojtaba Naderi-Boldaji, Ali Kazemzadeh, Abbas Hemmat, Sajad Rostami and Thomas Keller
pp. 204-214

Changes in soil stress with repeated wheeling is an area that has not been effectively investigated. It was hypothesized that variations in rut depth resulting in reduction of distance between the soil-tire interface and stress transducer is the potential reason for stress variations with repeated wheeling which was supported with experimental measurements and analytical simulations. However, variations in soil stress with repeated wheeling must have also contributed to stress changes with repeated wheeling.

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