4.7 Article

Enhancing Sustainability in Intensive Dill Cropping: Comparative Effects of Biobased Fertilizers vs. Inorganic Commodities on Greenhouse Gas Emissions, Crop Yield, and Soil Properties

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy12092124

Keywords

Anethum graveolens L.; organic amendments; GHG; drip irrigation

Funding

  1. Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness of Spain
  2. ERDF A way of making Europe [AGL2013-41612-R, EQC2018-004170-P, MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033]

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The treatment and utilization of organic solid waste is a promising alternative for increasing crop productivity and reducing environmental impact. In this study, the effects of organic and inorganic fertilizers on dill crop yield, soil properties, and greenhouse gas emissions were investigated. The results showed that organic-based fertilizers reduced nitrogen concentrations in crops and had similar yields to synthetic fertilizers, while also mitigating greenhouse gas emissions.
The treatment and valorization of organic solid waste has become a promising alternative to increase intensive crop productivity while reducing its environmental impact. Currently, reusing improved organic waste as novel biofertilizers is a vital tool to adapt semiarid agricultural regions to climate change, but this has been scarcely studied in aromatic crops. The present study aims to assess the greenhouse gas emissions, soil properties, and crop yield of a dill crop using a drip irrigation system with a normalized N application rate of 160 kg N ha(-1). We compare eight different fertilizing scenarios grouped into organic-based (manures and compost) and inorganic-based inputs (NPK commodities and slow-release formulations). GHG fluxes were measured during the 57-day fertigation period using static chambers. Key soil properties were measured previous to fertilizer applications and at harvest, coinciding with crop yield estimations. An increase in soil organic carbon was observed with stabilized organic treatments at 0-20 cm soil depth. The results show that stabilized organic-based materials lowered NO3- concentrations in dill biomass more than synthetic fertilizers, producing similar yields to those with synthetic fertilizers. In general, N2O emissions were positively affected by the treatments. Local specific emission factors for N2O were determined (0.08%), which were substantially lower than the default value (0.51%) of IPCC. The cumulative CO2 emissions were high in all the organic scenarios compared to the control treatment (277 kg C-CO2 ha(-1)), probably due to differences in labile organic C contents. Organic-based treatments showed multiple positive effects on crop quality, crop yields, and GHG mitigation potential. The use of organic amendments is an optimized N fertilizing strategy to promote circular economy and sustainability.

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