Long-term study of properties of a xerofluvent of the Guadalquivir River Valley under organic fertilization

The long-term effect of inorganic and organic fertilization in a vegetable crop rotation on soil chemical and biochemical properties was investigated in a trial in southern Spain. Two crops were grown in succession, potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) and a mixed-cropped strawberry-onion (Fragaria vesca L.-Allium cepa L.). Total organic carbon (TOC), Kjeldahl-N, bicarbonate-extractable P (Olsen-P), ammonium acetate extractable-potassium (AAE-K), microbial biomass carbon (Cmic), and enzyme activity (dehydrogenase, β-glucosidase, protease, and alkaline phosphatase) were determined in soils in the seventh and eighth year of management comparison. The metabolic quotient (qCO2) and the Cmic to TOC ratio were also calculated. Organically fertilized soils showed significant increases in TOC and Kjeldahl-N, available-P, AAE-K, microbial biomass C, and enzymatic activities compared with those found under inorganically fertilized soils. The qCO2 values were greater in inorganic than in organic fertilized plots indicating a lower microbial community respired at a greater rate in inorganic fertilized soils. The Cmic to TOC ratio in organic plots was lower than in inorganic plots indicating that microorganism in inorganically fertilized soils could have a better efficiency in the conversion of C sources to microbial biomass. Long-term organic fertilization positively affected soil organic matter content, thus improving soil chemical and biological fertility under arid environmental conditions in southwest Spain. However precautions must be taken as excessive accumulation of some nutrients, particularly N and P, can arise from the long-term use of compost.

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Main Authors: Melero Sánchez, Sebastiana, Madejón, Engracia, Herencia, Juan F., Ruiz Porras, J. C.
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: American Society of Agronomy 2008
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/64888
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spelling dig-irnas-es-10261-648882018-09-13T07:21:39Z Long-term study of properties of a xerofluvent of the Guadalquivir River Valley under organic fertilization Melero Sánchez, Sebastiana Madejón, Engracia Herencia, Juan F. Ruiz Porras, J. C. The long-term effect of inorganic and organic fertilization in a vegetable crop rotation on soil chemical and biochemical properties was investigated in a trial in southern Spain. Two crops were grown in succession, potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) and a mixed-cropped strawberry-onion (Fragaria vesca L.-Allium cepa L.). Total organic carbon (TOC), Kjeldahl-N, bicarbonate-extractable P (Olsen-P), ammonium acetate extractable-potassium (AAE-K), microbial biomass carbon (Cmic), and enzyme activity (dehydrogenase, β-glucosidase, protease, and alkaline phosphatase) were determined in soils in the seventh and eighth year of management comparison. The metabolic quotient (qCO2) and the Cmic to TOC ratio were also calculated. Organically fertilized soils showed significant increases in TOC and Kjeldahl-N, available-P, AAE-K, microbial biomass C, and enzymatic activities compared with those found under inorganically fertilized soils. The qCO2 values were greater in inorganic than in organic fertilized plots indicating a lower microbial community respired at a greater rate in inorganic fertilized soils. The Cmic to TOC ratio in organic plots was lower than in inorganic plots indicating that microorganism in inorganically fertilized soils could have a better efficiency in the conversion of C sources to microbial biomass. Long-term organic fertilization positively affected soil organic matter content, thus improving soil chemical and biological fertility under arid environmental conditions in southwest Spain. However precautions must be taken as excessive accumulation of some nutrients, particularly N and P, can arise from the long-term use of compost. Peer Reviewed 2013-01-23T16:05:54Z 2013-01-23T16:05:54Z 2008 2013-01-23T16:05:55Z artículo http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 doi: 10.2134/agronj2006.0316 issn: 0002-1962 e-issn: 1435-0645 Agronomy Journal 100(3): 611-618 (2008) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/64888 10.2134/agronj2006.0316 en none American Society of Agronomy
institution IRNAS ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
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libraryname Biblioteca del IRNAS España
language English
description The long-term effect of inorganic and organic fertilization in a vegetable crop rotation on soil chemical and biochemical properties was investigated in a trial in southern Spain. Two crops were grown in succession, potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) and a mixed-cropped strawberry-onion (Fragaria vesca L.-Allium cepa L.). Total organic carbon (TOC), Kjeldahl-N, bicarbonate-extractable P (Olsen-P), ammonium acetate extractable-potassium (AAE-K), microbial biomass carbon (Cmic), and enzyme activity (dehydrogenase, β-glucosidase, protease, and alkaline phosphatase) were determined in soils in the seventh and eighth year of management comparison. The metabolic quotient (qCO2) and the Cmic to TOC ratio were also calculated. Organically fertilized soils showed significant increases in TOC and Kjeldahl-N, available-P, AAE-K, microbial biomass C, and enzymatic activities compared with those found under inorganically fertilized soils. The qCO2 values were greater in inorganic than in organic fertilized plots indicating a lower microbial community respired at a greater rate in inorganic fertilized soils. The Cmic to TOC ratio in organic plots was lower than in inorganic plots indicating that microorganism in inorganically fertilized soils could have a better efficiency in the conversion of C sources to microbial biomass. Long-term organic fertilization positively affected soil organic matter content, thus improving soil chemical and biological fertility under arid environmental conditions in southwest Spain. However precautions must be taken as excessive accumulation of some nutrients, particularly N and P, can arise from the long-term use of compost.
format artículo
author Melero Sánchez, Sebastiana
Madejón, Engracia
Herencia, Juan F.
Ruiz Porras, J. C.
spellingShingle Melero Sánchez, Sebastiana
Madejón, Engracia
Herencia, Juan F.
Ruiz Porras, J. C.
Long-term study of properties of a xerofluvent of the Guadalquivir River Valley under organic fertilization
author_facet Melero Sánchez, Sebastiana
Madejón, Engracia
Herencia, Juan F.
Ruiz Porras, J. C.
author_sort Melero Sánchez, Sebastiana
title Long-term study of properties of a xerofluvent of the Guadalquivir River Valley under organic fertilization
title_short Long-term study of properties of a xerofluvent of the Guadalquivir River Valley under organic fertilization
title_full Long-term study of properties of a xerofluvent of the Guadalquivir River Valley under organic fertilization
title_fullStr Long-term study of properties of a xerofluvent of the Guadalquivir River Valley under organic fertilization
title_full_unstemmed Long-term study of properties of a xerofluvent of the Guadalquivir River Valley under organic fertilization
title_sort long-term study of properties of a xerofluvent of the guadalquivir river valley under organic fertilization
publisher American Society of Agronomy
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/64888
work_keys_str_mv AT melerosanchezsebastiana longtermstudyofpropertiesofaxerofluventoftheguadalquivirrivervalleyunderorganicfertilization
AT madejonengracia longtermstudyofpropertiesofaxerofluventoftheguadalquivirrivervalleyunderorganicfertilization
AT herenciajuanf longtermstudyofpropertiesofaxerofluventoftheguadalquivirrivervalleyunderorganicfertilization
AT ruizporrasjc longtermstudyofpropertiesofaxerofluventoftheguadalquivirrivervalleyunderorganicfertilization
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