Converting alfalfa pasture into annual cropland achieved high
productivity and zero loss of soil organic carbon in a semiarid area
Abstract
Converting alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) into cropland (rotation
cropland, RC) is a common way of land use to reuse degraded alfalfa
pasture. However, it is a big challenge for RC to achieve high
productivity and maintain high soil organic carbon (SOC) achieved by
previous alfalfa. Here, we conducted a nine-year field experiment, with
continuous cropland (CC) under plastic film mulching as reference, to
evaluate soil moisture restoration, crop productivity, and SOC in RC
also under plastic film mulching, in the case of fertilization and
non-fertilization, respectively. SOC and total soil N in the alfalfa
pasture before conversion were 12.3% and 7.7% higher, but the
available P and inorganic-N were 59.2% and 71.5% lower than in CC,
respectively. The crop yield and biomass were not significant between RC
and CC following the second year of conversion in both fertilization and
without fertilization cases. The SOC and total soil N in RC with
fertilization were similar to the previous alfalfa pasture throughout
the nine-year experiment, while decreased in RC without fertilization by
8.3% and 7.5% after the nine years. Soil moisture in RC at 0-0.6 m
restored to the level of CC only one year after the conversion, and
restored from 77.6% and 56.2% of CC to 95.3% and 69.2% at 0.6-2 and
2-5 m through nine-years after conversion. These findings help to dispel
the worries about the long-term low production and rapid decline of SOC
in RC and support for sustainable high-productivity and high SOC
sequestration in dryland farming.