1) Conventional tillage (CT), which plowed 23-25cm deep.
2) Reduced tillage (RT), which plowed 18-20 cm deep and less frequently than CT.
3) Reduced tillage with subsoiling (RTS), identical to RT with the addition of subsoiling, a technique that breaks up deep soil without rotating it.
Additionally, each treatment had individualized cover crops and tilling schedules, optimized for the tillage method as per past studies.
Four of eight crops–potatoes, spring wheat, fava beans, and pumpkin–had no significant difference in crop yield between conventional and reduced tillage treatments. Oats and grass clover had increased marketable yields under RT (up 12.1% and 11% respectively) and RTS (up 15% and 9.3% respectively) compared to CT, indicating that maintaining soil health can be significantly beneficial to these crops.
Compared to CT, cabbage yields were lower in RT (down 5.1%) and carrot yields were lower in both RT and RTS (down 13.2% and 15.2% respectively). The researchers hypothesized that the residue of the RT and RTS cover crops, which have been shown to have inhibitory effects to carrot growth, could have led to this drop in carrot yield. This effect was not present in CT fields because its soil was left empty between fall and spring while the RT and RTS fields hosted the suppressive white clover and vetch plants 4-6 weeks before carrot sowing.
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