Different sugarcane management systems on soils of coastal tablelands can cause alterations in their original soil structure. Effects of the different sugarcane management systems on the properties of a cohesive Yellow Argisol were studied in four areas of the Triunfo sugar mill in Alagoas State, Brazil. The treatments consisted of a site with and without cultivation irrigation each, one site with vinasse application and another under undisturbed native forest. Samples were collected at depths of 0-0.2, 0.2-0.4 and 0.4-0.8 m to determine the alterations in the bulk density, soil pore size distribution, soil water retention curves, and saturated hydraulic conductivity. The highest degree of clay dispersion in sugarcane-cultivated soils promoted a greater accumulation of clay particles in the subsurface soil layers. Management systems with sugarcane increased soil compaction, with a consequent alteration of the soil pore size distribution, reduced the saturated hydraulic conductivity and increased the retention of available water.
soil compaction; densification; porosity; sugarcane; hydraulic conductivity