The soil invertebrate contribution to nitrogen mineralisation differs between soils under organic and conventional dairy management

被引:12
|
作者
Schon, Nicole L. [1 ]
Mackay, Alec D. [2 ]
Hedley, Mike J. [3 ]
Minor, Maria A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Massey Univ, Inst Nat Resources, Palmerston North 4442, New Zealand
[2] AgRes Grasslands, Palmerston North 4442, New Zealand
[3] Massey Univ, Inst Nat Resources, Palmerston North 4442, New Zealand
关键词
Invertebrates; Resource availability; Treading pressure; Soil type; Pasture; NUTRIENT MINERALIZATION; EARTHWORM POPULATIONS; GRASS PRODUCTION; NEMATODE GENERA; FOOD-WEB; PASTURE; DIVERSITY; ABUNDANCE; CARBON; FAUNA;
D O I
10.1007/s00374-011-0604-y
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
Organic management aims to promote soil biological activity. To test whether organic management stimulates soil biological activity, invertebrates (macrofauna, mesofauna and microfauna) were collected from four paired commercial organically and conventionally managed dairy farms on different soil types (Allophanic, Pallic, Recent and flooded Recent). Food webs were constructed and rates of invertebrate-mediated N mineralisation calculated. The organic dairy operations used fewer nutrient inputs and had lower stocking rates than their paired conventional farms. This translated into lower calculated pasture production and less available plant litter entering the soil food web. Despite the lower plant litter inputs into the organic system, earthworm biomass was higher (particularly in the Recent and flooded Recent soils), suggesting that under conventional management the physical condition of the soil, as influenced by stock treading pressures, was more important for invertebrate activity and their influence on N mineralisation than was food supply. Nitrogen mineralisation was higher in organic systems, with earthworms contributing the most (24-98 kg N/ha/year). As the physical loading on the soil increased under conventional management, the ability of the soil to provide soil services (i.e. N mineralisation and litter decomposition) became compromised. Organic management on four soils stimulated biological activity by reducing the treading pressure on the soil and highlights the need to consider the influence of management practices on the faunal environment (food availability and physical condition) to understand the impacts of organic management and the role of fauna in N mineralisation.
引用
收藏
页码:31 / 42
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Interactions between carbon and nitrogen mineralization and soil organic matter chemistry in arctic tundra soils
    Weintraub, MN
    Schimel, JP
    ECOSYSTEMS, 2003, 6 (02) : 129 - 143
  • [42] Short-term biotic removal of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) compounds from soil solution and subsequent mineralisation in contrasting grassland soils
    Carswell, A. M.
    Hill, P. W.
    Jones, D. L.
    Blackwell, M. S. A.
    Johnes, P.
    Chadwick, D. R.
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2016, 96 : 82 - 85
  • [43] Soil carbon varies between different organic and conventional management schemes in arable agriculture
    Hu, Teng
    Sorensen, Peter
    Olesen, Jorgen Eivind
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF AGRONOMY, 2018, 94 : 79 - 88
  • [44] Milk fatty acid profile of Indian dairy cows reared under organic and conventional feeding management
    Maity, S. B.
    Kushwaha, B. P.
    Singh, Sultan
    Kumar, Anil
    Nag, S. K.
    Das, S. K.
    Rai, A. K.
    Dixit, A. K.
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCES, 2021, 91 (02): : 155 - 158
  • [45] Carbohydrate and nitrogen reserves in two cultivars of Japanese plum grown under organic and conventional management
    Felipe Perez-Romero, Luis
    Daza, Antonio
    Francisco Herencia, Juan
    Teodoro Arroyo, Francisco
    HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE, 2017, 44 (04) : 163 - 170
  • [46] Links between profitability, nitrogen surplus, greenhouse gas emissions, and energy intensity on organic and conventional dairy farms
    Flaten, Ola
    Koesling, Matthias
    Hansen, Sissel
    Veidal, Asbjorn
    AGROECOLOGY AND SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS, 2019, 43 (09) : 957 - 983
  • [47] Soil organic carbon decomposition responding to warming under nitrogen addition across Chinese vegetable soils
    Xu, Xintong
    Zhang, Qianqian
    Song, Mengxin
    Zhang, Xi
    Bi, Ruiyu
    Zhan, Liping
    Dong, Yubing
    Xiong, Zhengqin
    ECOTOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY, 2022, 242
  • [48] MINERALIZATION OF SOIL ORGANIC NITROGEN UNDER WATERLOGGED CONDITIONS IN RELATION TO OTHER PROPERTIES OF TROPICAL RICE SOILS
    SAHRAWAT, KL
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF SOIL RESEARCH, 1983, 21 (02): : 133 - 138
  • [49] Characterization of the amino acid composition of soils under organic and conventional management after addition of different fertilizers
    Perez, Pablo Gonzalez
    Zhang, Rui
    Wang, Xiaoli
    Ye, Jun
    Huang, Danfeng
    JOURNAL OF SOILS AND SEDIMENTS, 2015, 15 (04) : 890 - 901
  • [50] Nitrogen Management for Sustainable Soil Organic Carbon Increase in Inceptisols Under Wheat Cultivation
    Sarma, Banashree
    Gogoi, Nirmali
    COMMUNICATIONS IN SOIL SCIENCE AND PLANT ANALYSIS, 2017, 48 (12) : 1428 - 1437