281-20 The Rothamsted Long-Term Experiments: A Continuing Resource for Agriculture and Environmental Research for over 170 Years.
Poster Number 1530
See more from this Division: Special Sessions
See more from this Session: Long-Term Agricultural Research: A Means to Achieve Resilient Agricultural Production for the 21st Century and Beyond (Poster Session)
Abstract:
In addition to studies on crop yields and their trends over time, the experiments have been used for numerous other topics including:
- Soil carbon and nitrogen turnover
- Impacts of organic carbon content on soil physical properties
- Plant species diversity in semi-natural grassland
- Trends in micronutrient concentrations of wheat grain and implications for human nutrition
- Plant gene expression in relation to different manuring regimes
- Soil metagenomics
- Crop pathogen diversity and atmospheric sulphur deposition
- Fungicide resistance in plant pathogens
- Weed population dynamics in arable cropping
In the Broadbalk Experiment grain yields of winter-sown wheat have been surprisingly insensitive to soil organic carbon content provided sufficient nutrients are applied as inorganic fertilizers. But the opposite is the case for spring-sown barley in the Hoosfield Experiment. With modern spring barley varieties, well protected from fungal diseases, maximum yields are only obtained where soil organic carbon content has been increased through long-term application of manure.
See more from this Division: Special Sessions
See more from this Session: Long-Term Agricultural Research: A Means to Achieve Resilient Agricultural Production for the 21st Century and Beyond (Poster Session)