4.0 Article

Effects of Conservation Agriculture and Fertilization on Soil Microbial Diversity and Activity

Journal

ENVIRONMENTS
Volume 2, Issue 3, Pages 358-384

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/environments2030358

Keywords

soil microbial metabolic diversity; enzymatic activity; conservation agriculture; soil quality

Funding

  1. Maize Trust
  2. ARC-ISCW

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Soil microbial communities perform critical functions in ecosystem processes. These functions can be used to assess the impact of agricultural practices on sustainable crop production. In this five-year study, the effect of various agricultural practices on soil microbial diversity and activity was investigated in a summer rainfall area under South African dryland conditions. Microbial diversity and activity were measured in the 0-15 cm layer of a field trial consisting of two fertilizer levels, three cropping systems, and two tillage systems. Using the Shannon-Weaver and Evenness diversity indices, soil microbial species richness and abundance were measured. Microbial enzymatic activities: beta-glucosidase, phosphatase and urease, were used to evaluate ecosystem functioning. Cluster analysis revealed a shift in soil microbial community diversity and activity over time. Microbial diversity and activity were higher under no-till than conventional tillage. Fertilizer levels seemed to play a minor role in determining microbial diversity and activity, whereas the cropping systems played a more important role in determining the activity of soil microbial communities. Conservation agriculture yielded the highest soil microbial diversity and activity in diversified cropping systems under no-till.

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