Twelve pairs of no-till and conventional-till soybean plots were used to ev
aluate the effects of erosion on erodibility and soil productivity Crop yie
ld data were collected from 1983 to 1997 and an initial report published in
1992 on results from the first eight years of data. No-till annual crop yi
elds varied widely due to weather but appeared to slightly decrease with ti
me. A definitive trend line was derived for declining conventional-till soy
bean yields with time. In the first several years after establishment of no
-till, conventional-till yields exceeded no-till yields. However no-till yi
elds exceeded those from conventional-till by about 800 kg/ha after 14 year
s. Runoff and soil losses from no-till and conventional till were measured
from selected pairs of plots with a rainulator in 1986, 1987, 1990, and 199
6. Rain was applied to each pair after a light cultivation used to provide
a similar surface to both no-till and conventional till. Runoff from 60-min
initial runs at 65 mm/h on the no-till history plots was 11 to 35% less th
an from conventional-till history plots. During these runs, soil loss amoun
ts from no-till history were 23 to 77% less than from the conventional-till
history. Soil losses from no-till decreased slightly with time. Except for
1990, soil losses from conventional-till changed little with time from ini
tiation of the test. Little support was given for earlier indications of a
trend for increasing erodibility with time for plots with conventional-till
history.