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    Crop Management

    Conservation Tillage

    Definition

    Conservation tillage is any tillage system that leaves at least 30% of crop residue on the soil surface after planting to reduce erosion and conserve moisture. It includes no-till, strip-till, ridge-till, and mulch-till. Conservation tillage cuts soil erosion 50–95% versus conventional moldboard plowing and reduces fuel use 30–70% (USDA NRCS, 2023).

    How Conservation Tillage Works

    Conventional tillage with a moldboard plow inverts the top 20–30 cm of soil, burying virtually all residue and leaving a bare, vulnerable surface. Conservation tillage replaces this full inversion with lighter-touch systems. No-till (see no-till) leaves 70–100% of residue undisturbed. Strip-till cultivates only a narrow seedbed (~15–20 cm wide) in fall or spring, leaving inter-row residue untouched. Ridge-till plants on permanent ridges rebuilt each year, with residue accumulating in the furrows. Mulch-till uses chisel plows or disks that maintain 30–50% surface residue.

    Residue cover delivers measurable agronomic benefits. Surface residue cuts raindrop impact, reducing sheet and rill erosion 50–95% depending on cover percentage. Residue acts as a mulch, cutting soil evaporation 20–40% and conserving 25–50 mm of moisture through the growing season — often the difference between adequate and drought-stressed yield in rainfed systems. Residue slowly decomposes, adding 0.05–0.2% organic matter per year to the topsoil. Earthworm populations typically 2–4× higher under conservation tillage than conventional tillage (Penn State Extension, 2022).

    Adoption has grown substantially. USDA data show conservation tillage now covers roughly 65% of US cropland, up from 26% in 1990. Barriers include cool, wet spring soils that delay planting, increased herbicide reliance for weed control (mechanical cultivation is reduced or eliminated), and equipment transition costs (€20,000–100,000 to retrofit planters and upgrade to residue-managing drills). Carbon-payment programs and conservation cost-share under USDA EQIP reduce transition costs and accelerate adoption.

    Sources

    1. USDA NRCS (2023). Conservation Tillage — conservation practice standard 329.
    2. Penn State Extension (2022). Conservation tillage systems for agronomic crops.

    Related Terms

    No-Till
    Crop Management
    Cover Crop
    Crop Management
    Soil Erosion
    Soil
    Soil Health
    Soil
    Back to all glossary terms

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