4.7 Article

Soil Microbial Activity in Different Cropping Systems under Long-Term Crop Rotation

Journal

AGRICULTURE-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agriculture12040532

Keywords

conventional system; organic system; cover crops; manure; soil microbial activity

Categories

Funding

  1. ERA-NET Core organic project FertilCrop
  2. ERA-NET Core organic project AllOrganic, under Estonian University of Life Sciences [8-2/T13001PKTM, P180273PKTT, P190259PKTT, P170062PKTM]
  3. Institutional Research Project [IUT36-2]

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Soil microbes play a crucial role in nutrient cycling and maintaining soil health. This study found that both the cropping system and the precrops in rotation have significant effects on soil microbial hydrolytic activity (SMA). Organic systems with cover crops and composted manure showed higher SMA compared to conventional systems. The effects of pesticides and low organic residuals in unfertilized conventional systems resulted in lower SMA, indicating that these systems are not sustainable for soil health.
Soil microbes play a key role in the nutrient cycling by decomposing the organic material into plant-available elements and also by maintaining the soil health. The study of soil microbial hydrolytic activity (SMA) was carried out in a long-term crop rotation (barley undersown (us) with red clover, red clover, winter wheat, pea and potato) experiment in five different farming systems during 2014-2018. There were two conventional systems, with chemical plant protection and mineral fertilizers, and three organic systems, which included winter cover crops and composted manure. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effect of the (i) cropping system and (ii) precrops in rotation on the soil SMA. The soil microbial hydrolytic activity was significantly affected by yearly weather conditions, farming system, and crops. In all farming systems, the SMA was the lowest after dry and cold conditions during early spring in 2018. In unfertilized conventional systems, the considerably lower SMA is explained by the side effects of pesticides and low organic residuals, and we can conclude that the conventional system with no added fertilizer or organic matter is not sustainable, considering soil health. In each year, the SMA of organic systems with cover crops and composted manure was 7.3-14.0% higher compared to all farming systems. On average, for both farming systems, the SMA of all the rotation crops was positively correlated with the SMA values of precrops. However, in conventional farming systems, the effect of undersowing on the SMA of the precrop was smaller compared to organic systems.

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