Soil carbon and nitrogen data during eight years of cover crop and compost treatments in organic vegetable production

Type de document
journalArticle
Langue source
-- Langue source --
Titre
Soil carbon and nitrogen data during eight years of cover crop and compost treatments in organic vegetable production
Titre français
Titre anglais
Auteur(s)
  • WHITE Kathryn E.
  • BRENNAN Eric B.
  • CAVIGELLI Michel A.
Editeur(s)
Autre(s)
Id
EZ6YGLBY
Version
2790
Date ajout
12 mars 2021 19:55
Date modification
12 mars 2021 19:55
Résumé
Data presented are on carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) inputs, and changes in soil C and N in eight systems during the first eight years of a tillage-intensive organic vegetable systems study that was focused on romaine lettuce and broccoli production in Salinas Valley on the central coast region of California. The eight systems differed in organic matter inputs from cover crops and urban yard-waste compost. The cover crops included cereal rye, a legume-rye mixture, and a mustard mixture planted at two seeding rates (standard rate 1x versus high rate 3x). There were three legume-rye 3x systems that differed in compost inputs (0 versus 7.6 Mg ha−1 vegetable crop−1) and cover cropping frequency (every winter versus every fourth winter). The data include: (1) changes in soil total organic C and total N concentrations and stocks and nitrate N (NO3–N) concentrations over 8 years, (2) cumulative above ground and estimated below ground C and N inputs, cover crop and crop N uptake, and harvested crop N export over 8 years, (3) soil permanganate oxidizable carbon (POX-C) concentrations and stocks at time 0, 6 and 8 years, and (4) cumulative, estimated yields of lettuce and broccoli (using total biomass and harvest index values) over the 8 years. The C inputs from the vegetables and cover crops included estimates of below ground inputs based on shoot biomass and literature values for shoot:root. The data in this article support and augment information presented in the research article “Winter cover crops increase readily decomposable soil carbon, but compost drives total soil carbon during eight years of intensive, organic vegetable production in California”.
Note
None
CRAW tags
  • AB - Spécifique
  • FREDO biologie et travail du sol
  • FREDO fertilisation
  • couvert végétal
  • légumes
WEB tags
  • compost
  • cover crops
  • nitrogen
  • nitrogen budgets
  • nutrient management
  • organic farming
  • organic vegetable production
  • soil carbon
Titre de la publication
Data in Brief
Volume
33
Pages
106481
Date caractères
December 1, 2020
Date publication
1 décembre 2020
Doi
10.1016/j.dib.2020.106481 Le DOI est une URL unique de référencement d'une publication. Il est donc plus fiable et permanent qu'une URL classique
Issn
2352-3409 L’ISSN est un code de 8 chiffres servant à identifier les journaux, revues, magazines, périodiques de toute nature et sur tous supports, papier comme électronique.