An ecosystem approach to assess soil quality in organically and conventionally managed farms in Iceland and Austria

Intensive agricultural production can be an important driver for the loss of long-term soil quality. For this reason, the European Critical Zone Observatory (CZO) network adopted four pairs of agricultural CZO sites that differ in their management: conventional or organic. The CZO sites include two...

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Main Authors: van Leeuwen, J. P., Lehtinen, T., Lair, G. J., Bloem, J., Hemerik, L., Ragnarsdóttir, K. V., Gísladóttir, G., Newton, J. S., de Ruiter, P. C.
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Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/soil-1-83-2015
https://soil.copernicus.org/articles/1/83/2015/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:soil25863 2023-05-15T16:48:46+02:00 An ecosystem approach to assess soil quality in organically and conventionally managed farms in Iceland and Austria van Leeuwen, J. P. Lehtinen, T. Lair, G. J. Bloem, J. Hemerik, L. Ragnarsdóttir, K. V. Gísladóttir, G. Newton, J. S. de Ruiter, P. C. 2018-09-27 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/soil-1-83-2015 https://soil.copernicus.org/articles/1/83/2015/ eng eng doi:10.5194/soil-1-83-2015 https://soil.copernicus.org/articles/1/83/2015/ eISSN: 2199-398X Text 2018 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/soil-1-83-2015 2020-07-20T16:24:48Z Intensive agricultural production can be an important driver for the loss of long-term soil quality. For this reason, the European Critical Zone Observatory (CZO) network adopted four pairs of agricultural CZO sites that differ in their management: conventional or organic. The CZO sites include two pairs of grassland farms in Iceland and two pairs of arable farms in Austria. Conventional fields differed from the organic fields in the use of artificial fertilisers and pesticides. Soils of these eight farms were analysed in terms of their physical, chemical, and biological properties, including soil aggregate size distribution, soil organic matter contents, abundance of soil microbes and soil fauna, and taxonomic diversity of soil microarthropods. In Icelandic grasslands, organically farmed soils had larger mean weight diameters of soil aggregates than the conventional farms, while there were no differences on the Austrian farms. Organic farming did not systematically influence organic matter contents or composition, nor soil carbon and nitrogen contents. Also, soil food web structures, in terms of presence of trophic groups of soil organisms, were highly similar among all farms, indicating a low sensitivity of trophic structure to land use or climate. However, soil organism biomass, especially of bacteria and nematodes, was consistently higher on organic farms than on conventional farms. Within the microarthropods, taxonomic diversity was systematically higher in the organic farms compared to the conventional farms. This difference was found across countries and farm, crop, and soil types. The results do not show systematic differences in physical and chemical properties between organic and conventional farms, but confirm that organic farming can enhance soil biomass and that microarthropod diversity is a sensitive and consistent indicator for land management. Text Iceland Copernicus Publications: E-Journals SOIL 1 1 83 101
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description Intensive agricultural production can be an important driver for the loss of long-term soil quality. For this reason, the European Critical Zone Observatory (CZO) network adopted four pairs of agricultural CZO sites that differ in their management: conventional or organic. The CZO sites include two pairs of grassland farms in Iceland and two pairs of arable farms in Austria. Conventional fields differed from the organic fields in the use of artificial fertilisers and pesticides. Soils of these eight farms were analysed in terms of their physical, chemical, and biological properties, including soil aggregate size distribution, soil organic matter contents, abundance of soil microbes and soil fauna, and taxonomic diversity of soil microarthropods. In Icelandic grasslands, organically farmed soils had larger mean weight diameters of soil aggregates than the conventional farms, while there were no differences on the Austrian farms. Organic farming did not systematically influence organic matter contents or composition, nor soil carbon and nitrogen contents. Also, soil food web structures, in terms of presence of trophic groups of soil organisms, were highly similar among all farms, indicating a low sensitivity of trophic structure to land use or climate. However, soil organism biomass, especially of bacteria and nematodes, was consistently higher on organic farms than on conventional farms. Within the microarthropods, taxonomic diversity was systematically higher in the organic farms compared to the conventional farms. This difference was found across countries and farm, crop, and soil types. The results do not show systematic differences in physical and chemical properties between organic and conventional farms, but confirm that organic farming can enhance soil biomass and that microarthropod diversity is a sensitive and consistent indicator for land management.
format Text
author van Leeuwen, J. P.
Lehtinen, T.
Lair, G. J.
Bloem, J.
Hemerik, L.
Ragnarsdóttir, K. V.
Gísladóttir, G.
Newton, J. S.
de Ruiter, P. C.
spellingShingle van Leeuwen, J. P.
Lehtinen, T.
Lair, G. J.
Bloem, J.
Hemerik, L.
Ragnarsdóttir, K. V.
Gísladóttir, G.
Newton, J. S.
de Ruiter, P. C.
An ecosystem approach to assess soil quality in organically and conventionally managed farms in Iceland and Austria
author_facet van Leeuwen, J. P.
Lehtinen, T.
Lair, G. J.
Bloem, J.
Hemerik, L.
Ragnarsdóttir, K. V.
Gísladóttir, G.
Newton, J. S.
de Ruiter, P. C.
author_sort van Leeuwen, J. P.
title An ecosystem approach to assess soil quality in organically and conventionally managed farms in Iceland and Austria
title_short An ecosystem approach to assess soil quality in organically and conventionally managed farms in Iceland and Austria
title_full An ecosystem approach to assess soil quality in organically and conventionally managed farms in Iceland and Austria
title_fullStr An ecosystem approach to assess soil quality in organically and conventionally managed farms in Iceland and Austria
title_full_unstemmed An ecosystem approach to assess soil quality in organically and conventionally managed farms in Iceland and Austria
title_sort ecosystem approach to assess soil quality in organically and conventionally managed farms in iceland and austria
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.5194/soil-1-83-2015
https://soil.copernicus.org/articles/1/83/2015/
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op_source eISSN: 2199-398X
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https://soil.copernicus.org/articles/1/83/2015/
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