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Effects of organic versus conventional management on chemical and biological parameters in agricultural soils
- Source :
- Applied Soil Ecology, 31(1-2), 120-135, Applied Soil Ecology 31 (2006) 1-2
- Publication Year :
- 2006
-
Abstract
- A comparative study of organic and conventional arable farming systems was conducted in The Netherlands to determine the effect of management practices on chemical and biological soil properties and soil health. Soils from thirteen accredited organic farms and conventionally managed neighboring farms were analyzed using a polyphasic approach combining traditional soil analysis, culture-dependent and independent microbiological analyses, a nematode community analysis and an enquiry about different management practices among the farmers. Organic management, known primarily for the abstinence of artificial fertilizers and pesticides, resulted in significantly lower levels of both nitrate and total soluble nitrogen in the soil, higher numbers of bacteria of different trophic groups, as well as larger species richness in both bacteria and nematode communities and more resilience to a drying–rewetting disturbance in the soil. The organic farmers plough their fields less deeply and tend to apply more organic carbon to their fields, but this did not result in a significantly higher organic carbon content in their soils. The levels of ammonium, organic nitrogen, phosphate and total phosphorus did not differ, significantly between the soils under different management. Fifty percent of the conventional Dutch farmers also used organic fertilizers and the numbers of farmers using a green crop fertilizer did not differ between the two management types. Soil type – clayey or sandy soil – in general had a much stronger effect on the soil characteristics than management type. The soil type influenced pH, nitrate, ammonium, phosphate and organic carbon levels as well as numbers of oligotrophic bacteria and of different groups of nematodes, and different diversity indices. With the collected data set certain soil characteristics could also be attributed to the use of different management practices like plow depth, crop or cover crop type or to the management history of the soil.
- Subjects :
- agroecosystems
microbial-populations
Soil biodiversity
Soil Science
plant
PPO Arable Farming, Multifunctional Agriculture and Field Production of Vegetables
diversity
No-till farming
Biologische bedrijfssystemen
low-input
farming systems
Groene Ruimte en Vollegrondsgroente
Biological Farming Systems
PPO Arable Farming
Ecology
Soil organic matter
species composition
Soil carbon
Multifunctional Agriculture and Field Production of Vegetables
Soil type
PE&RC
Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)
Soil quality
maturity index
communities
Agronomy
gradient gel-electrophoresis
Histosol
Environmental science
Soil fertility
PPO Akkerbouw, Groene Ruimte en Vollegrondsgroente
PPO Akkerbouw
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 09291393
- Volume :
- 31
- Issue :
- 1-2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Applied Soil Ecology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e0cc7ffe33fc2e038746910faae3ddcc
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsoil.2005.03.003