50
In the pure sand chopped as well as ground
straw again gave the highest emergences when it
was incorporated or mixed with the soil. Straw
on
top was the worst alternat
i
ve with chop ped
straw and the second best choice with ground
straw. As far as the
s
e
quence is concerned, this
is in line with the data in
Figure 8
.
The standard garden soil always had a higher
emergence than the pure sand under the same
conditions. Howev
e
r, whereas incorpo rating the
straw with
pure sand was the best choice, for
standard garden soil it was the worst a
l
ternative
with chopped straw. This is an i
m
portant result.
The pure sand without any o
r
ganic matter needs
incorporating the straw into the
soil, since this
improves the soil structure for an adaequate air to
water supply. On the other hand,
the standard
garden soil already is high in organic matter;
incorporating the crop residues makes it too fluffy
or downy in case the straw is only choppe d. This
is quite in line with the experi
e
nce often
expressed by farmers.
Grinding the straw in all cases resulted in
distinctly
higher emergence than chopping it. This applies
to the pure sand as well as to the
standard garden
soil.
For the combination of
ground straw and
standard garden soil e xtremely good results
were recorded almost independently
of the
placement (
Fig. 9
).
The pure sand as well as the standard garden soil
represent ex
t
remes; they do not show the
conditions in practical farming. Therefo
r
e, the
same experiments were carried out with two
natural soils, a loamy sand and a clay loam soil
(
Fig. 10
). Whereas results
obtained with the two
artificial soils were partly quite surprising, the
results recorded for these two natural soils were
about in line with expect
a
tions. The order of
increasing emergence - with one exception - was
straw incorporated, straw on the top, no straw.
The exception occured with the loamy sand soil
and
ground straw; for this combination the
alternative in straw placemen
t
hardly did matter.
In all cases grinding the straw instead of chopping
it clearly improved the emergence, as it did with
the artificial soils.
Similar results as with rape were obtained for
small grains with the exception, that the
differences between th
e
treatments were
somewhat smaller.
Improvements in the
straw distribution over the
area by the combines too are important. Most
combines still distribute the chopped straw very
unevenly over the area. The straw topic is
especially relevant for cultivatio
n
and sowing
without plowing within a short p
e
riod after late
harvested cereals. It probably will become even
more important, since
high yielding cereals need
a
long growing period, which means either early
sowing or late ha rvesting, perhaps even both. It
is
difficult to predict at the present time, whether
placing the straw on the top of the seedbed or
breaking it up more during combining is a better
alternative. So there is still need for research.
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