4.7 Article

Severe drought rather than cropping system determines litter decomposition in arable systems

Journal

AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT
Volume 338, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agee.2022.108078

Keywords

Climate change; Drought; Resistance; Resilience; Organic farming; Conservation tillage

Funding

  1. Mercator Research Program of the ETH Zurich World Food System Center
  2. ETH Zurich Foundatio
  3. China Scholarship Council

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Litter decomposition in arable systems is impacted by drought, and different cropping systems have little effect on the resistance and resilience of decomposition. Higher quality litter is more susceptible to drought suppression but shows faster recovery compared to lower quality litter. Drought also reduces soil nitrate availability. Overall, drought has a stronger impact on decomposition than cropping systems.
Litter decomposition is a fundamental process in soil carbon dynamics and nutrient turnover. However, litter decomposition in arable systems remains poorly explored, and it is unclear whether different management practices, such as organic farming, conservation agriculture can mitigate drought effects on litter decomposition. Thus, we examined the effects of a severe experimental drought on litter decomposition in four cropping systems, i.e., organic vs. conventional farming, each with two levels of tillage (intensive vs. conservation tillage) in Switzerland. We incubated two types of standard litter (tea bags), i.e., high-quality green tea with a low C:N ratio and low-quality rooibos tea with a high C:N ratio. We assessed litter decomposition during the simulated drought and in the post-drought period during three years in three different crops, i.e., pea-barley, maize, and winter wheat. Subsequently, we assessed whether decomposition in the four cropping systems differed in its resistance and resilience to drought. Drought had a major impact on litter decomposition and suppressed decomposition to a similar extent in all cropping systems. Both drought resistance and resilience of decomposition were largely independent of cropping systems. Drought more strongly reduced decomposition of the high-quality litter compared to the low-quality litter during drought conditions regarding the absolute change in mass remaining (12.3% vs. 6.5 %, respectively). However, the decomposition of high-quality litter showed a higher resilience, i.e., high-quality approached undisturbed decomposition levels faster than low-quality litter after drought. Soil nitrate availability was also strongly reduced by drought (by 32-86 %), indicating the strong reduction in nutrient availability and, most likely, microbial activity due to water shortage. In summary, our study suggests that severe drought has a much stronger impact on decomposition than cropping system indicating that it might not be possible to maintain decomposition under drought by the cropping system approaches we studied. Nevertheless, management options that improve litter quality, such as the use of legume crops with high N concentrations, may help to enhance the resilience of litter decomposition in drought-stressed crop fields.

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