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Synergism between production and soil health through crop diversification, organic amendments and crop protection in wheat-based systems

Walder, Florian; Büchi, Lucie; Wagg, Cameron; Colombi, Tino; Banerjee, Samiran; Hirte, Juliane; Mayer, Jochen; Six, Johan; Keller, Thomas; Charles, Raphael and van der Heijden, Marcel (2023) Synergism between production and soil health through crop diversification, organic amendments and crop protection in wheat-based systems. Journal of Applied Ecology, 60 (10), pp. 2091-2104.

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Document available online at: https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1365-2664.14484


Summary

1. One of the critical challenges in agriculture is enhancing yield without compromising its foundation, a healthy environment and, particularly, soils. Hence, there is an urgent need to identify management practices that simultaneously support soil health and production and help achieve environmentally sound production systems.
2. To investigate how management influences production and soil health under realistic agronomic conditions, we conducted an on-farm study involving 60 wheat fields managed conventionally, under no-till or organically. We assessed 68 variables defining management, production and soil health properties. We examined how management systems and individual practices describing crop diversification, fertiliser inputs, agrochemical use and soil disturbance influenced production—quantity and quality—and soil health focusing on aspects ranging from soil organic matter over soil structure to microbial abundance and diversity.
3. Our on-farm comparison showed marked differences between soil health and production in the current system: organic management resulted in the best overall soil health (+47%) but the most significant yield gap (−34%) compared to conventional management. No-till systems were generally intermediate, exhibiting a smaller yield gap (−17%) and only a marginally improved level of soil health (+5%) compared to conventional management. Yet, the overlap between management systems in production and soil health properties was considerably large.
4. Our results further highlight the importance of soil health for productivity by revealing positive associations between crop yield and soil health properties, particularly under conventional management, whereas factors such as weed pressure were more dominant in organic systems.
5. None of the three systems showed advantages in supporting production-soil health-based multifunctionality. In contrast, a cross-system analysis suggests that multifunctional agroecosystems could be achieved through a combination of crop diversification and organic amendments with effective crop protection.
6. Synthesis and applications: Our on-farm study implies that current trade-offs in managing production and soil health could be overcome through more balanced systems incorporating conventional and alternative approaches. Such multifunctionality supporting systems could unlock synergies between vital ecosystem services and help achieve productive yet environmentally sound agriculture supported by healthy soils.


EPrint Type:Journal paper
Keywords:wheat, soil quality, crop diversification, Abacus, FiBL70050, AdventiSol
Agrovoc keywords:
Language
Value
URI
English
wheat
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_8373
English
soil health -> soil quality
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_a9645d28
English
crop diversification -> diversification
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_2344
Subjects: Soil > Soil quality
Crop husbandry > Production systems > Cereals, pulses and oilseeds
Crop husbandry > Crop health, quality, protection
Research affiliation: Switzerland > FiBL - Research Institute of Organic Agriculture Switzerland > Crops > Arable crops > Cereals
Switzerland > FiBL - Research Institute of Organic Agriculture Switzerland > Crops > Crop protection
Switzerland > FiBL - Research Institute of Organic Agriculture Switzerland > Soil > Soil quality
DOI:10.1111/1365-2664.14484
Related Links:https://www.fibl.org/en/themes/projectdatabase/projectitem/project/2272
Deposited By: Forschungsinstitut für biologischen Landbau, FiBL
ID Code:51773
Deposited On:09 Oct 2023 08:56
Last Modified:06 Dec 2023 09:11
Document Language:English
Status:Published
Refereed:Peer-reviewed and accepted

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