Agronomy Journal Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published online 1 September 1982
Published in Agron J 74:926-927 (1982)
© 1982 American Society of Agronomy
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Soybean Growth over and between Subsoil Channels on Two Loamy Sands1

J. T. Batchelor and T. C. Keisling2

Visual differences in soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] growth have been observed in dry years where soybeans were grown on loamy sands in Arkansas that had been subsoiled at right angles to the row. Because of this observation, soybeans were grown over and between subsoil channels to characterized soybean development as affected by the distance soybeans were planted from a subsoil channel. A Crevasse loamy sand (a mixed, thermic Typic Udipsamments) and a Steele loamy sand (a sandy over clayey, mixed, nonacid, thermic Aquic Udifluvents) were subsoiled to an approximate depth of 35 cm at right angles to the row (cross-subsoiled) with subsoil shanks spaced at 97 cm and planted with soybeans. Plant height, total dry weight, and seed yield were measured on soybeans that were grown over the subsoil channel and at two distances between channels at 20 sites on each soil. Plant height, total dry weight, and seed yield declined with distance from the subsoil channel. Soybeans with poorest growth were located at the midpoint between subsoil channels. The decline in soybean growth with distance from the subsoil channel was attributed to reduction in traffic pan destruction as the distance from the subsoil channel increased.

Key Words: Subsoiled • Loamy sands • Dry weight • Glycine max (L.) Merr.


1 Published with the approval of the Director of the Arkansas Agric. Exp. Stn. Fayetteville, AR.

2 Assistant professor, Univ. of Arkansas, Northeast Research and Extension Center, Keiser, AR 72351 and associate professor, Southeast Research and Extension Center, Monticello, AR 71655.

Received for publication November 23, 1981.


This article has been cited by other articles:


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M. P. Popp, T. C. Keisling, C. R. Dillon, and P. M. Manning
Economic and Agronomic Assessment of Deep Tillage in Soybean Production on Mississippi River Valley Soils
Agron. J., January 1, 2001; 93(1): 164 - 169.
[Abstract] [Full Text]




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Soil Science Society of America Journal
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The Plant Genome
Copyright © 1982 by the American Society of Agronomy.