Published May 5, 2021 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Effects of Management and Hillside Position on Soil Organic Carbon Stratification in Mediterranean Centenary Olive Grove

Description

The short- and medium—long-term effects of management and hillside position on soil
organic carbon (SOC) changes were studied in a centenary Mediterranean rainfed olive grove. One
way to measure these changes is to analyze the soil quality, as it assesses soil degradation degree
and attempts to identify management practices for sustainable soil use. In this context, the SOC
stratification index (SR-COS) is one of the best indicators of soil quality to assess the degradation
degree from SOC content without analyzing other soil properties. The SR-SOC was calculated in soil
profiles (horizon-by-horizon) to identify the best soil management practices for sustainable use. The
following time periods and soil management combinations were tested: (i) in the medium-long-term
(17 years) from conventional tillage (CT) to no-tillage (NT), (ii) in the short-term (2 years) from CT
to no-tillage with cover crops (NT-CC), and (iii) the effect in the short-term (from CT to NT-CC) of
different topographic positions along a hillside. The results indicate that the SR-SOC increased with
depth for all management practices. The SR-SOC ranged from 1.21 to 1.73 in CT0, from 1.48 to 3.01 in
CT1, from 1.15 to 2.48 in CT2, from 1.22 to 2.39 in NT-CC and from 0.98 to 4.16 in NT; therefore, the
soil quality from the SR-SOC index was not directly linked to the increase or loss of SOC along the
soil profile. This demonstrates the time-variability of SR-SOC and that NT improves soil quality in
the long-term.

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Additional details

Funding

Diverfarming – Crop diversification and low-input farming across Europe: from practitioners engagement and ecosystems services to increased revenues and chain organisation 728003
European Commission