Mandan, North Dakota Site Logo
ARS Home About Us Helptop nav spacerContact Us En Espanoltop nav spacer
Printable VersionPrintable Version     E-mail this pageE-mail this page
Agricultural Research Service United States Department of Agriculture
Search
  Advanced Search
Programs and Projects
Glomalin Information
GPFarm Information
Research Scientists
 

Research Project: INTEGRATED AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS FOR THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS

Location: Mandan, North Dakota

Title: Contributions of Soil Archives to Understand Soil and Agroecosystem Change

Authors

Submitted to: ASA-CSSA-SSSA Annual Meeting Abstracts
Publication Type: Abstract
Publication Acceptance Date: June 3, 2008
Publication Date: October 5, 2008
Citation: Liebig, M.A., Varvel, G.E., Potter, K.N. 2008. Contributions of Soil Archives to Understand Soil and Agroecosystem Change. IN: ASA-CSSA-SSSA Annual Meeting Abstracts (CDROM), 5-9 October 2008. Houston, TX.

Technical Abstract: Sustaining highly productive and environmentally sound agroecosystems will be a significant challenge over the next several decades given projections for human population growth and global climate change. Because of these conditions, long-term experiments will play an important role in understanding how agroecosystems affect soil attributes ¿ and, in turn ¿ how changes in soil attributes impact the broader environment. Documenting management effects on soil attributes requires not only well-managed long-term experiments, but also carefully cataloged soil archives. Archived soil samples provide an inventory of change in soil attributes over long temporal scales, thereby providing critical insight into agroecosystem sustainability. More specifically, archived soil samples can be used to address key questions with implications to both agricultural productivity and environmental quality. Some questions may include: Are soils gaining or losing soil organic matter? Has the quality of soil organic matter changed over time? Which plant nutrients are accumulating in soil? Which are being depleted? Are soils becoming more acid/alkaline? Addressing such questions can provide information germane to the development and/or refinement of models for understanding management impacts on key soil functions. Furthermore, use of ancillary data can provide possible explanations for underlying mechanisms causing soil change. In this presentation, information from long-term experiments and soil archives will be reviewed using the above questions as a context for understanding management influences on agroecosystem sustainability. Discussion will focus on sites and archives throughout the US Great Plains, where changes in soil attributes resulting from management can take decades to be expressed.

   

 
Project Team
Hendrickson, John
Liebig, Mark
Tanaka, Donald - Don
Hanson, Jonathan - Jon
Phillips, Rebecca
Nichols, Kristine
Kronberg, Scott
Scholljegerdes, Eric
Archer, David
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Soil Resource Management (202)
  Integrated Farming Systems (207)
  Bioenergy & Energy Alternatives (307)
 
 
Last Modified: 11/05/2008
ARS Home | USDA.gov | Site Map | Policies and Links 
FOIA | Accessibility Statement | Privacy Policy | Nondiscrimination Statement | Information Quality | USA.gov | White House