AI Article Synopsis

  • The study highlights the negative impacts of intensified farming on soil quality and biodiversity in India, where a significant portion of land is degraded due to such practices.
  • A long-term experiment in the Nimar Valley shows that organic farming improves soil health by increasing organic carbon and microbial activity, while conventional methods lead to nitrogen losses due to high nitrification.
  • The research emphasizes the importance of adopting organic farming practices to enhance soil quality and better support sustainable development goals in semi-arid regions.

Article Abstract

The adverse effects of intensified cropland practices on soil quality and biodiversity become especially evident in India, where nearly 60% of land is dedicated to cultivation and almost 30% of soil is already degraded. Intensive agricultural practice significantly contributes to soil degradation, highlighting the crucial need for effective countermeasures to support sustainable development goals. A long-term experiment, established in the semi-arid Nimar Valley (India) in 2007, monitors the effect of organic and conventional management on the plant-soil system in a Vertisol. The focus of our study was to assess how organic and conventional farming systems affect biological and chemical soil quality indicators. Additionally, we followed the community structure of the soil microbiome throughout the vegetation phase under soya or cotton cultivation in the year 2019. We found that organic farming enhanced soil organic carbon and nitrogen content, increased microbial abundance and activity, and fostered distinct microbial communities associated with traits in nutrient mineralization. In contrast, conventional farming enhanced the abundance of bacteria involved in ammonium oxidation suggesting high nitrification and subsequent nitrogen losses with regular mineral fertilization. Our findings underscore the value of adopting organic farming approaches in semi-arid subtropical regions to rectify soil quality and minimize nitrogen losses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11503945PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/femsec/fiae127DOI Listing

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