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RESEARCH ARTICLE

The effect of fallowing on the yield of wheat. I. The effect on soil water storage and nitrate supply

RJ French

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 29(4) 653 - 668
Published: 1978

Abstract

The effect of fallowing before a wheat crop was studied in South Australia in an environment with suboptimal rainfall in the growing season.

A 9–10 month pre-sowing fallow increased mean water storage (0–120 cm depth) at sowing by 28 mm, compared with a non-fallow soil preparation (2 month period of cultivation). Variation in additional storage ranged from nil to 125 mm. These amounts depended on soil type and season: in coarse-textured soils, fallowing conserved little additional water, but in fine-textured soils much additional water could be stored. Storage was not related to the summer rainfall (November-March) before sowing but was related to rainfall during July and August in the previous winter—just before or at the start of the fallow period. A combination of these two factors, fine-textured soil and good July–August rainfall, gave considerable storage.

Fallowing also increased the nitrate nitrogen content in the surface 60 cm at sowing; the mean additional nitrogen amounted to 19 kg/ha in the coarse-textured soils and 30 kg/ha in the fine-textured soils. The largest increases due to fallowing were recorded in soils following medic leys and with ample rains on the fallow in spring. Comparison is made between these findings and those obtained with fallowing in other parts of Australia.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9780653

© CSIRO 1978

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