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The Effect of Monoculture, Crop Rotation Combinations, and Continuous Bare Fallow on Soil CO(2) Emissions, Earthworms, and Productivity of Winter Rye after a 50-Year Period

One of the main goals of the 21st century’s developing society is to produce the necessary amount of food while protecting the environment. Globally, particularly in Lithuania and other northern regions with similar climatic and soil conditions, there is a lack of data on the long-term effects of cr...

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Autores principales: Bogužas, Vaclovas, Skinulienė, Lina, Butkevičienė, Lina Marija, Steponavičienė, Vaida, Petrauskas, Ernestas, Maršalkienė, Nijolė
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8838759/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35161410
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11030431
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author Bogužas, Vaclovas
Skinulienė, Lina
Butkevičienė, Lina Marija
Steponavičienė, Vaida
Petrauskas, Ernestas
Maršalkienė, Nijolė
author_facet Bogužas, Vaclovas
Skinulienė, Lina
Butkevičienė, Lina Marija
Steponavičienė, Vaida
Petrauskas, Ernestas
Maršalkienė, Nijolė
author_sort Bogužas, Vaclovas
collection PubMed
description One of the main goals of the 21st century’s developing society is to produce the necessary amount of food while protecting the environment. Globally, particularly in Lithuania and other northern regions with similar climatic and soil conditions, there is a lack of data on the long-term effects of crop rotation under the current conditions of intensive farming and climate change. It has long been recognized that monocultures cause soil degradation compared to crop rotation. Research hypothesis: the long-term implementation of crop rotation makes a positive influence on the soil environment. The aim of our investigation was to compare the effects of a 50-year-long application of different crop rotations and monocultures on soil CO(2) emissions, earthworms, and productivity of winter rye. Long-term stationary field experiments were established in 1966 at Vytautas Magnus University Experimental Station (54°53′ N, 23°50′ E). The study was conducted using intensive field rotation with row crops, green manure crop rotations, three-course rotation, and rye monoculture. Pre-crop had the largest impact on soil CO(2) emissions, and more intensive soil CO(2) emissions occurred at the beginning of winter rye growing season. Rye appeared not to be demanding in terms of pre-crops. However, its productivity decreased when grown in monoculture, and the optimal mineral fertilization remained lower than with crop rotation, but productivity remained stable.
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spelling pubmed-88387592022-02-13 The Effect of Monoculture, Crop Rotation Combinations, and Continuous Bare Fallow on Soil CO(2) Emissions, Earthworms, and Productivity of Winter Rye after a 50-Year Period Bogužas, Vaclovas Skinulienė, Lina Butkevičienė, Lina Marija Steponavičienė, Vaida Petrauskas, Ernestas Maršalkienė, Nijolė Plants (Basel) Article One of the main goals of the 21st century’s developing society is to produce the necessary amount of food while protecting the environment. Globally, particularly in Lithuania and other northern regions with similar climatic and soil conditions, there is a lack of data on the long-term effects of crop rotation under the current conditions of intensive farming and climate change. It has long been recognized that monocultures cause soil degradation compared to crop rotation. Research hypothesis: the long-term implementation of crop rotation makes a positive influence on the soil environment. The aim of our investigation was to compare the effects of a 50-year-long application of different crop rotations and monocultures on soil CO(2) emissions, earthworms, and productivity of winter rye. Long-term stationary field experiments were established in 1966 at Vytautas Magnus University Experimental Station (54°53′ N, 23°50′ E). The study was conducted using intensive field rotation with row crops, green manure crop rotations, three-course rotation, and rye monoculture. Pre-crop had the largest impact on soil CO(2) emissions, and more intensive soil CO(2) emissions occurred at the beginning of winter rye growing season. Rye appeared not to be demanding in terms of pre-crops. However, its productivity decreased when grown in monoculture, and the optimal mineral fertilization remained lower than with crop rotation, but productivity remained stable. MDPI 2022-02-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8838759/ /pubmed/35161410 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11030431 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bogužas, Vaclovas
Skinulienė, Lina
Butkevičienė, Lina Marija
Steponavičienė, Vaida
Petrauskas, Ernestas
Maršalkienė, Nijolė
The Effect of Monoculture, Crop Rotation Combinations, and Continuous Bare Fallow on Soil CO(2) Emissions, Earthworms, and Productivity of Winter Rye after a 50-Year Period
title The Effect of Monoculture, Crop Rotation Combinations, and Continuous Bare Fallow on Soil CO(2) Emissions, Earthworms, and Productivity of Winter Rye after a 50-Year Period
title_full The Effect of Monoculture, Crop Rotation Combinations, and Continuous Bare Fallow on Soil CO(2) Emissions, Earthworms, and Productivity of Winter Rye after a 50-Year Period
title_fullStr The Effect of Monoculture, Crop Rotation Combinations, and Continuous Bare Fallow on Soil CO(2) Emissions, Earthworms, and Productivity of Winter Rye after a 50-Year Period
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Monoculture, Crop Rotation Combinations, and Continuous Bare Fallow on Soil CO(2) Emissions, Earthworms, and Productivity of Winter Rye after a 50-Year Period
title_short The Effect of Monoculture, Crop Rotation Combinations, and Continuous Bare Fallow on Soil CO(2) Emissions, Earthworms, and Productivity of Winter Rye after a 50-Year Period
title_sort effect of monoculture, crop rotation combinations, and continuous bare fallow on soil co(2) emissions, earthworms, and productivity of winter rye after a 50-year period
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8838759/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35161410
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11030431
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