Long-term organic farming on a citrus plantation results in soil organic carbon recovery
Article 2019 en
Authors
AN
Agata Novara
MF
Manuel Pulido Fernández
JR
Jesús Rodrigo‐Comino
Abstract
1 min read
It has been shown that soil management under organic farming can enhance soil organic carbon, thereby mitigating atmospheric greenhouse gas increases, but until now quantitative evaluations based on long term experiments are scarce, especially under Mediterranean conditions. Changes in soil organic carbon (SOC) content were examined in response to organic management with cover crops in a Mediterranean citrus plantation using 21 years of survey data. Soil organic carbon increase was more apparent 5 years after a land management change suggesting that, for citrus plantations on Mediterranean conditions, studies should be longer than five years in duration. Soil organic carbon sequestration rate did not significantly change during the 21 years of observation, with values ranging from -1.10 Mg C ha-1 y-1 to 1.89 Mg C ha-1 y-1. After 21 years, 61 Mg CO2 ha-1 were sequestered in long-lived soil C pools. These findings demonstrate that organic management is an effective strategy to restore or increase SOC content in Mediterranean citrus systems.
Andreas Gattinger, Adrian Müller, Matthias Haeni, Colin Skinner, Andreas Fließbach, Nina Buchmann, Paul Mäder, Matthias Stolze, Pete Smith, Nadia El‐Hage Scialabba, U. Niggli
Alicia Ledo, Pete Smith, Ayalsew Zerihun, Jeanette Whitaker, José Luis Vicente‐Vicente, Zhangcai Qin, Niall P. McNamara, Yuri Lopes Zinn, Mireia Llorente, Mark A. Liebig, Matthias Kuhnert, Marta Dondini, Axel Don, Eugenio Díaz‐Pinés, Ashim Datta, Haakon Bakka, Eduardo Aguilera, Jon Hillier
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.