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
Cavalcade Legume (Centrosema pascuorum) Used as Soil Amendment in RD41 Rice Fields: Short-term Effects on the Soil Nematode Community, Soil Properties, and Yield Components
Natthidech Beesa,Pipat Macharoen,Nattakorn Kuncharoen,Tida Dethoup,Anongnuch Sasnarukkit,Buncha Chinnasri,Kansiree Jindapunnapat +6 more
TL;DR: Cavalcade legume (Centrosema pascuorum) significantly reduced plant-parasitic nematode populations, increased beneficial nematodes, and improved soil properties and rice yields in RD41 rice fields, offering a promising management strategy for nematode-infested paddy fields in Thailand.
Cover crops in arable lands increase functional complementarity and redundancy of bacterial communities
Abdelrahman Alahmad,Guillaume Decocq,Fabien Spicher,Louay Kheirbeik,Ahmad Kobaissi,Thierry Tétu,Frédéric Dubois,Jérôme Duclercq +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effects of cover crops and nitrogen fertilization on soil chemical and biological properties using a controlled experiment combining soil chemical analyses, high-throughput sequencing and community level physiological profiles.
Soil Determines Microbial Functionality and Genotype Guides Endophytic Recruitment to Adaptability in Sugarcane Systems
J.D. Ferreti,Bianca Ribeiro,João de Andrade Bonetti,Luís Eduardo Aranha Camargo,Silvana Creste,Eiko E. Kuramae,Cláudia Barros Monteiro-Vitorello +6 more
- 05 Sep 2025
TL;DR: Soil type and sugarcane genotype interact to shape microbiome composition and plant gene expression, with genotype-specific microbial recruitment strategies emerging in response to soil properties, influencing plant growth and adaptation.
Herbivore-induced volatile emissions are altered by soil legacy effects in cereal cropping systems
Shealyn C. Malone,David K. Weaver,Tim Seipel,Fabian D. Menalled,Megan L. Hofland,Justin B. Runyon,Amy M. Trowbridge +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of agricultural practices on constitutive and herbivore-induced VOC emissions by a major staple crop through soil legacy effects was investigated, including microbial composition and nutrient availability, which can influence the emissions of plant volatile organic compounds that serve as host-location cues for insect pests and their natural enemies.
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