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Diversifying and perennializing plants in agroecosystems alters retention of newCandNfrom crop residues

AbstractManaging soils to retain new plant inputs is key to moving toward a sustainable and regenerative agriculture. Management practices, like diversifying and perennializing agroecosystems, may affect the decomposer organisms that regulate how new residue is converted to persistent soil organic matter. Here we tested whether 12 years of diversifying/perennializing plants in agroecosystems through extended rotations or grassland restoration would decrease losses of new plant residue inputs and, thus, increase retention of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) in soil. We tracked dual‐labeled (13C and15N), isotopically enriched wheat (Triticum aestivum) residue in situ for 2 years as it decomposed in three agroecosystems: maize–soybean (CS) rotation, maize–soybean–wheat plus red clover and cereal rye cover crops (CSW2), and spring fallow management with regeneration of natural grassland species (seven to 10 species; SF). We measured losses of wheat residue (Cwheatand Nwheat) in leached soil solution and greenhouse gas fluxes, as well as how much was recovered in microbial biomass and bulk soil at 5‐cm increments down to 20 cm. CSW2 and SF both had unique, significant effects on residue decomposition and retention dynamics that were clear only when using nuanced metrics that able to tease apart subtle differences. For example, SF retained a greater portion of Cwheatin 0–5 cm surface soils (155%,p = 0.035) and narrowed the Cwheatto Nwheatratio (p < 0.030) compared to CS. CSW2 increased an index of carbon‐retention efficiency, Cwheatretained in the mesocosm divided by total measured, from 0.18 to 0.27 (49%,p = 0.001), compared to CS. Overall, we found that diversifying and extending the duration of living plants in agroecosystems can lead to greater retention of new residue inputs in subtle ways that require further investigation to fully understand.
- University of Michigan–Flint United States
- Queens University of Charlotte United States
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory United States
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory United States
- University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh United States
Crops, Agricultural, Nitrogen, Science, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, DegreeDisciplines::Life Sciences::Plant Sciences::Agronomy and Crop Sciences, 630, 333, Soil, soil organic matter, stable isotope, dual-labeled litter, Triticum, biodiversity, decomposition, microbial biomass, Agriculture, regenerative agriculture, Biogeochemistry, sustainability, Carbon, DegreeDisciplines::Physical Sciences and Mathematics::Environmental Sciences::Natural Resources Management and Policy, DegreeDisciplines::Physical Sciences and Mathematics::Environmental Sciences::Sustainability, Edible Grain
Crops, Agricultural, Nitrogen, Science, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, DegreeDisciplines::Life Sciences::Plant Sciences::Agronomy and Crop Sciences, 630, 333, Soil, soil organic matter, stable isotope, dual-labeled litter, Triticum, biodiversity, decomposition, microbial biomass, Agriculture, regenerative agriculture, Biogeochemistry, sustainability, Carbon, DegreeDisciplines::Physical Sciences and Mathematics::Environmental Sciences::Natural Resources Management and Policy, DegreeDisciplines::Physical Sciences and Mathematics::Environmental Sciences::Sustainability, Edible Grain
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