Hermann J. Heege and H. H. Voßhenrich GERMANY
The need for soil cultivation mainly results from
crop or plant successions in modern agriculture.
In case there is no abrupt crop or plan
succession as with permanent gras
s
land, no one
thinks about cultivation. And in fact the most
fertile soils in the world have developed under
permanent grassland or under forests without any
cultivation. On the other hand, it is well known
that cultivation can induce serious soil erosion. So
why do crop successions necessitate cultivation?
Several points are important:
°
soil bulk density needed for efficient plant
growth;
°
soil aggregate sizes for a high field
emergence;
°
weed control;
°
crop residue management;
°
straw effects in the seedbed.
1. Soil bulk density Removing the crop at harvest time results in an
increase of soil bulk density due to the harvesting
machinery and later on due to rain. The farmers
try to compensate for this by cultivaion. They
have to consider the long term climatic cond itions
(
Fig. 1 ). In humid areas the water supply of the
crop se ldom is a problem, but the soil aeration
often is. Therefore the farers have to cultivate
rather deeply and thoroughly and for this
traditionally use the moldboar
d-
plow as pr
i
mary
tool. For
ar
id areas instead of the soil aeration
the water supply is the problem; consequently
cultivation is either very sha
l
low or left out
completely. And of cause it is not the climate
alone which should determine the amount of
cultivation. In some soils the tex
t
ure and the
organic matter content pr
o
vide for suffi
c
ient
aeration. Thus concerning the bulk density these
soils can produce well even in a humid climate
with little or no cul
t
ivation. Additional factors in
this respect are the crop rota
t
ion and especi
a
lly
the time span between harvest and establishment
of the next crop.
The farmers can adopt to the long term cl
i
mate;
yet it is almost impossible for them up to now to
react adaequately to the short term weather
variations. Ideally they would have to pro
v
ide for
a high bulk density in a dry season and vice versa
in a wet year (
Fig. 2 ). Despite the fact that many
weather satellites now operate combined with
modern computers, the weather forecasts still are
not rel
i
able beyond a few days. Much better
adapted cultivation could be realized if in the
future the forecasts can be accurate for some
weeks.