With the main objective to produce a basis for advice to farmers
concerning optimal ploughing depth under various conditions,
a series of field experiments were initiated throughout Sweden.
At 19 sites on various soils (clay content 72–521 g
kg-1, organic matter content 21–89 g kg-1) mouldboard
ploughing to about 15, 22 and 28 cm depth was repeated annually
for up to 17 years. The total number of location-years was
241. Traditional farming had previously been practised at
the sites, including annual mouldboard ploughing to 20–25
cm depth. Spring-sown barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and oats
(Avena sativa L.) were the most frequent crops but many other
crops were grown less frequently. Crop residues were generally
returned to the soil; straw was chopped at harvest. Post-emergence
herbicides were regularly used, generally resulting in an
adequate control of annual weeds. However, the control of
perennial weeds, particularly couch grass (Elymus repens L.
Gould) was often inadequate. At ploughing depths of 22 and
28 cm, the mean crop yields were 2% and 3%, respectively,
higher than at 15 cm. However, the results varied considerably
between sites. In soils with a high silt content, the shallowest
ploughing resulted in up to 10% higher yield than deeper ploughing,
provided the control of perennial weeds was adequate. The
main reason seemed to be improved structural stability in
the surface soil because the concentration of organic matter
in this layer became higher the shallower the ploughing. In
clay soils with relatively stable structure, as well as in
sandy soils, the deepest ploughing resulted in the highest
yields, probably because of the deeper loosening. At sites
where perennial weeds imposed problems, the weed control was
better the deeper the ploughing, sometimes increasing the
relative yield after deeper ploughing by several percent as
compared with shallow ploughing. Most of this effect was obtained
already at the intermediate ploughing depth. The results led
to the following conclusions for Swedish agriculture. It may
be profitable to plough sandy soils annually as deep as 30
cm, coarse sandy soils perhaps even deeper. In clay and clay
loam soils, ploughing deeper than 20–25 cm generally
cannot be recommended. In silty soils with an unstable structure,
mouldboard ploughing, if any, should be shallow (=15 cm),
and perennial weeds should be controlled by other methods.