Dataset: Woburn Ley-arable experiment cropping sequence 1938-2020

Citation:  Margaret Glendining, Paul Poulton, Andrew Macdonald, Richard Ostler, Edward Johnston (2022). Woburn Ley-arable experiment cropping sequence 1938-2020 Electronic Rothamsted Archive, Rothamsted Research 10.23637/wrn3-cropping1938-2020-02

Summary

Cropping details of the Woburn Ley-arable experiment, 1938-2020, with details of the arable and ley-arable rotation sequences in each of the five Blocks, and the different treatment crops and varieties. Updated from Version 1, with addition of a cropping database. The experiment was designed to test the effects of different rotations with and without leys (short-term herbage) on the yield of two arable Test crops. It is now an important resource for investigating long-term changes in soil organic matter due to different cropping systems.

Methods

The Woburn Ley-arable Experiment, started in 1938, compares the effects of continuous arable rotations and ley-arable rotations on soil organic matter and the yield of two arable test crops, on a sandy loam soil. It consists of 80 main plots, divided over five blocks. Half the plots have been in four continuous five-year arable or ley-arable rotations since 1938: three years of Treatment crops followed by two arable Test crops. The Treatments were: Ah/AB/ABe (all arable rotation with 1-year hay or beans); Ar/AF/AM/AO (all arable rotation with roots or fallow or maize or oats); L/Ln3 (3-year grazed ley then grass ley with fertilizer N); Lu/Lc3 (3-year legume then grass/clover ley).
The other 40 plots were in alternating rotations from 1938 to the mid-1970s: a 20-year cycle of all four arable and ley-arable rotations. These were replaced by eight-year grass or grass/clover leys in the mid-1970s: LLn8 (8-year grass leys with fertilizer N, followed by two arable test crops); LLc8 (8-year grass/clover leys, followed by two arable test crops). The rotations are phased in over a five-year period in the five different blocks, so that each year of the five-year rotation is present each year. The eight-year leys were also phased in, the first cycle starting 1973-77, the second cycle 1978-82. The four eight-year leys were stopped in 2007 and replaced with AO (continuous arable with oats); ABe (continuous arable with beans); Ln3 (three-year grass leys with nitrogen); Lc3 (three-year grass/clover leys).

Technical Information

The main plots are in pairs, one of each pair received FYM (farmyard manure) applied every fifth year, to the first test crop, 1941-1967.

Related Documents

Contributors

  • Margaret Glendining: Data curator
  • Andrew Macdonald: Researcher
  • Paul Poulton: Researcher
  • Richard Ostler: Data manager
  • Nathalie Castells-Brooke: Data manager
  • Andy Gregory: Project leader
  • Edward Johnston: Researcher

Dataset Access and Conditions

Rights Holder

Rothamsted Research

License

Creative Commons License This dataset is available under a Creative Commons Attribution Licence (4.0).

Cite this Dataset

YOU MUST CITE AS: Margaret Glendining, Paul Poulton, Andrew Macdonald, Richard Ostler, Edward Johnston (2022). Dataset: Woburn Ley-arable experiment cropping sequence 1938-2020 Electronic Rothamsted Archive, Rothamsted Research https://doi.org/10.23637/wrn3-cropping1938-2020-02

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Conditions of Use

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Table Of Contents

  • Cropping data, with details of the crop grown on each plot on each year
  • Crop types, including variety
  • Rotation types, with details of the different arable and ley-arable rotations
  • Details of FYM application -Management notes

Taken from the Rothamsted Yield Books, field plans and paper archive.

  • The dataset Woburn Ley-arable experiment cropping sequence 1938-2020 is a published dataset from the e-RA Database. e-RA is part of the Rothamsted Long-Term Experiments - National Bioscience Research Infrastructure (RLTE-NBRI), which also covers maintenance of the Long-Term Experiments, the Rothamsted Sample Archive and Rothamsted's environmental monitoring activities including the weather stations and its role in the UK Environmental Change Network
  • The RLTE-NBRI is funded by UK Research and Innovation - Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (UKRI-BBSRC) under award BBS/E/RH/23NB0007 (2023-2028). The RLTE-NBRI is also supported by the Lawes Agricultural Trust. e-RA has been part of a National Capability since 2012, previous awards from the BBSRC were Grants BBS/E/C/00005189 (2012-2017) and BBS/E/C/000J0300 (2017-2022)
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For further information and assistance, please contact the e-RA curators, Sarah Perryman and Margaret Glendining using the e-RA email address: era@rothamsted.ac.uk