Abstract:
The experiment was carried out between 2005 – 2008 at Ezareni – The Experimental Farm of the Agricultural
University of Iasi, in the East side of Romania (47o
07’ N latitude, 27o
30’E longitude), on a cambic chernozem (SRTS2003), or haplic chernozems (WRB-SR, 1998), with a clay-loamy texture, 6.8 pH, 2.7% humus content and a medium
level of fertilization. The experimental area has an annual average temperature of 9.4o
C and precipitation of 587 mm.
The experiment was a “split plot” design with three replicates. Plots covered an area of 60 m2
with a rotation of soybean
- winter wheat - maize. The maize mean yield values showed significant differences in plots plowed at 20 cm and very
significant results in the disc harrow treatment when compared to the control treatment. These findings confirm that
increasing tillage depth result in higher yields. In disc harrow plots, the mean yield over three years was 4532 kg/ha
while the conventional tillage variant (plowed at 20 cm) yield recorded 5528 kg/ha. The highest yield of 6482 kg/ha
was recorded in the control treatment (plowed at 30 cm). The conservation variants, chisel and paraplow, resulted in
intermediate yields between disc harrow and the control treatment, the differences being statistically nonsignificant.