Effect of grazing and cultivation on some chemical properties of soils in the mixed prairie
Issue Date
1990-09-01Keywords
grassland soilssoil organic matter
tillage
monosaccharides
organic acids and salts
soil quality
transformation
physicochemical properties
chernozemic soils
mixed pastures
Hesperostipa comata
Alberta
pastures
Bouteloua gracilis
prairies
grazing
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Dormaar, J. F., & Willms, W. D. (1990). Effect of grazing and cultivation on some chemical properties of soils in the mixed prairie. Journal of Range Management, 43(5), 456-460.Publisher
Society for Range ManagementJournal
Journal of Range ManagementDOI
10.2307/3899012Additional Links
https://rangelands.org/Abstract
Components of the organic matter were studied in soil under 3 Mixed Prarie types: grassland dominated by needle-and-thread/blue grama (Stipa comata Trin. and Rupr./Bouteloua gracilis (HBK.) Lag. ex Steud.) in good range condition; grassland significantly modified by grazing, dominated by blue grama and in poor range condition; and grassland, dominated by needle-and-thread/blue grama in good range condition, but converted to cropland and under continuous wheat for 4 years. The soils were sampled on 13 April 1988. Concentrations of total organic carbon in the upper 2 cm were 1.39, 2.70, and 1.87%, respectively. The higher organic carbon under blue grama was caused by an active, ramified, fine rootmass which gave rise to most of the monosaccharides being of microbial origin. The monosaccharides in the lower Ap horizon in the cropland were generally of plant origin from incorporated straw. The Ah horizons of the needle-and-thread/blue grama and blue grama sites and the Ap horizon of the cultivated site yielded 244, 696, and 370 migrograms g-1 organic acids in the alkaline-soluble fraction of the soil, respectively. Although most of the organic compounds identified were present in all 3 soils, the quantitative patterns were quite different. Differences exist due to inputs by different species, and 4 years of cropping also made significant soil chemical changes. This study demonstrated the importance of recognizing the history of the soils studied when describing soil quality.Type
textArticle
Language
enISSN
0022-409Xae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.2307/3899012