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ABSTRACT
The effects of leguminous and gramineous green manure crops and corn and cotton crop residues on soil structure were compared by measuring water infiltration rates in irrigation furrows. Experiments were performed on alluvial soils of widely varying texture, developed in a Mediter-ranean-type climate.
Gramineous summer and winter green manures improved infiltration relative to fallow. This benefit was restricted to soils of medium and fine textures. The effectiveness of barley green manure increased as it advanced in maturity. Neither summer nor winter annual legumes influenced infiltration.
Corn crop residue and, to a lesser extent, cotton crop residue were effective in improving infiltration. Corn roots alone also made a significant, but lesser, contribution to improved infiltration.
1 Contribution of the Department of Agronomy, University of California, Davis.
2 Associate Professor of Agronomy and Professor of Irrigation, University of California, Davis. The authors gratefully acknowledge the aid of Mr. Frederick E. Paige, formerly graduate student, in Experiments 1 and 2; Mr. George Worker, Associate Specialist in Agronomy, University of California, in Experiment 4; and Mr. E. Gordon Smith, Agronomist, Crops Research Division, ARS, USDA, in Experiment 5.
Received for publication May 19, 1958. Accepted for publication August 31, 1959.
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