Soil erosion is a significant threat to agricultural productivity on sloped lands. This paper assesses the effectiveness of several different soil conservation practices for vegetable systems on sloped volcanic ash-derived soils. A field experiment was conducted to test the authors' hypothesis that contouring, strip cropping, and high-value contour hedgerows (asparagus, pineapple, pigeonpea, and lemongrass) would reduce soil loss relative to the traditional up-and-down farming method. They found that up-and-down cultivation had the greatest annual soil loss, followed by high-value contour hedgerows, strip cropping, and contouring. For all test plots there was a large gradient in the soil characteristics and productivity between the upper and lower bounds of the plots; crop yields in the downslope sections were significantly higher. The contour hedgerow method caused rapid formation of bioterraces, which also showed much greater productivity in the bottom portions
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)
History
Volume
63
Issue
5
Start Page
1366
End Page
1376
Number of Pages
11
ISSN
0361-5995
Location
Madison, Wisc
Publisher
Soil Science Society of America
Language
en-aus
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Open Access
No
External Author Affiliations
Department of Agronomy and Range Science; Department of Crop and Soil Sciences; School of Biological and Environmental Sciences;