Cover crops to increase soil microbial diversity and mitigate decline in perennial agriculture. A review
Eric Vukicevich,Eric Vukicevich,Tom Lowery,Pat Bowen,José Ramón Úrbez-Torres,Miranda M. Hart +5 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that non-crop vegetation management is a viable and cost-effective means of minimizing crop decline in perennial monocultures but is in need of more direct experimental investigation in perennial agroecosystems.
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Abstract: Commercial perennial agriculture is prone to declining productivity due to negative plant-soil feedback. An alternative to costly and environmentally harmful conventional treatment such as soil fumigation could be to manipulate soil microbial diversity through careful selection and management of cover crop mixtures. Although cover crops are already used in these systems for other reasons, their capacity to influence soil biota is unexploited. Here, we examine the role of plant diversity and identity on plant-soil feedbacks in the context of perennial agriculture. We identify key microorganisms involved in these feedbacks and explore plant-based strategies for mitigating decline of perennial crop plants. We conclude that (1) increasing plant diversity increases soil microbial diversity, minimizing the proliferation of soil-borne pathogens; (2) populations of beneficial microbes can be increased by increasing plant functional group richness, e.g., legumes, C4 grasses, C3 grasses, and non-leguminous forbs; (3) brassicas suppress fungal pathogens and promote disease-suppressive bacteria; (4) native plants may further promote beneficial soil microbiota; and (5) frequent tillage, herbicide use, and copper fungicides can harm populations of beneficial microbes and, in some cases, contribute to greater crop decline. Non-crop vegetation management is a viable and cost-effective means of minimizing crop decline in perennial monocultures but is in need of more direct experimental investigation in perennial agroecosystems.
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Citations
Root-associated Burkholderia spp. on the hairy vetch (Vicia villosa Roth.) cover crop vary depending on soil history of use
Walter Omar Draghi,Florencia Alvarez,Daniela Marta Russo,Antonio Lagares,Luis Gabriel Wall,Angeles Zorreguieta +5 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that bulk soils with a history of crop rotation instead of monocropping contribute with a higher diversity of species capable of interacting with hairy vetch roots.
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Spatial, temporal and technical variability in the diversity of prokaryotes and fungi in agricultural soils
TL;DR: In this article , the effects of three sources of technical variability on the soil prokaryotes and fungal diversity were evaluated in three crop management contexts, potato, corn/soybean and grassland.
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Impact of Cluster Thinning on Wine Grape Yield and Fruit Composition: A Review and Meta-Analysis
Joshua VanderWeide,Esmaeil Nasrollahiazar,Steve Schultze,Paolo Sabbatini,S. D. Castellarin +4 more
TL;DR: CT timing and severity influence fruit composition, but timing has less impact than severity. Moderate CT severity (36–55%) is most effective for improving fruit composition.
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Cover crop residue quality regulates litter decomposition dynamics and soil carbon mineralization kinetics in semi-arid cropping systems
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Impact of cropping systems on the functional diversity of rhizosphere microbial communities associated with maize plant: a shotgun approach.
TL;DR: In this paper, the functional diversity of the rhizosphere microbiome in mono-cropping and crop rotation farming sites using shotgun metagenomic techniques was analyzed. And the results revealed that a total of 24 functional categories dominated the rotational cropping site, while four functional classes dominated the mono-crop sites.
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