Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/13090
Título: Aggregate stability by the "high energy moisture characteristic" method in an oxisol under differentiated management
Título(s) alternativo(s): Estabilidade de agregados pelo método high energy moisture characteristic, em latossolo sob manejo diferenciado
Palavras-chave: Coffee production
Soil management
Oxisoil - Aggregation
Café - Produção
Solo - Manejo
Latossolo - Agregação
Data do documento: Set-2014
Editor: Sociedade Brasileira de Ciência do Solo
Citação: SILVA, E. A. da et al. Aggregate stability by the "high energy moisture characteristic" method in an oxisol under differentiated management. Revista Brasileira de Ciência do Solo, Viçosa, MG, v. 38, n. 5, p. 1633-1642, Sept./Oct. 2014.
Resumo: Studies testing the High Energy Moisture Characteristic (HEMC) technique in tropical soils are still incipient. By this method, the effects of different management systems can be evaluated. This study investigated the aggregation state of an Oxisol under coffee with Brachiaria between crop rows and surface-applied gypsum rates using HEMC. Soil in an experimental area in the Upper São Francisco region, Minas Gerais, was studied at depths of 0.05 and 0.20 m in coffee rows. The treatments consisted of 0, 7, and 28 Mg ha-1 of agricultural gypsum rates distributed on the soil surface of the coffee rows, between which Brachiaria was grown and periodically cut, and compared with a treatment without Brachiaria between coffee rows and no gypsum application. To determine the aggregation state using the HEMC method, soil aggregates were placed in a Büchner funnel (500 mL) and wetted using a peristaltic pump with a volumetric syringe. The wetting was applied increasingly at two pre-set speeds: slow (2 mm h-1) and fast (100 mm h-1). Once saturated, the aggregates were exposed to a gradually increasing tension by the displacement of a water column (varying from 0 to 30 cm) to obtain the moisture retention curve [M = f (Ψ)], underlying the calculation of the stability parameters: modal suction, volume of drainable pores (VDP), stability index (slow and fast), VDP ratio, and stability ratio. The HEMC method conferred sensitivity in quantifying the aggregate stability parameters, and independent of whether gypsum was used, the soil managed with Brachiaria between the coffee rows, with regular cuts discharged in the crop row direction, exhibited a decreased susceptibility to disaggregation.
URI: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/13090
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