Towards integrated cover crop management: N, P and S release from aboveground and belowground residues

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Towards integrated cover crop management : N, P and S release from aboveground and belowground residues. / Hansen, Veronika; Eriksen, Jørgen; Jensen, Lars Stoumann; Thorup-Kristensen, Kristian; Magid, Jakob.

In: Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, Vol. 313, 107392, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hansen, V, Eriksen, J, Jensen, LS, Thorup-Kristensen, K & Magid, J 2021, 'Towards integrated cover crop management: N, P and S release from aboveground and belowground residues', Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, vol. 313, 107392. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2021.107392

APA

Hansen, V., Eriksen, J., Jensen, L. S., Thorup-Kristensen, K., & Magid, J. (2021). Towards integrated cover crop management: N, P and S release from aboveground and belowground residues. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, 313, [107392]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2021.107392

Vancouver

Hansen V, Eriksen J, Jensen LS, Thorup-Kristensen K, Magid J. Towards integrated cover crop management: N, P and S release from aboveground and belowground residues. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment. 2021;313. 107392. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2021.107392

Author

Hansen, Veronika ; Eriksen, Jørgen ; Jensen, Lars Stoumann ; Thorup-Kristensen, Kristian ; Magid, Jakob. / Towards integrated cover crop management : N, P and S release from aboveground and belowground residues. In: Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment. 2021 ; Vol. 313.

Bibtex

@article{4da1c41c6c3d44368a05db877986df56,
title = "Towards integrated cover crop management: N, P and S release from aboveground and belowground residues",
abstract = "Ecological intensification is crucial for arable organic farmers, in order to partly close the yield gap to conventional yields. One strategy for this is improved management of cover crops, to increase availability of both nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and sulfur (S) for the subsequent main crop. However, the potential of cover crops to take up and release nutrients has primarily been determined for aboveground biomass and mostly for N. There have been fewer studies on belowground biomass, and these have focused on recoverable roots. Thus, unrecoverable residues from rhizodeposits and nodules, have been overlooked. The aim of this incubation study was therefore to assess the release of N, P and S from aboveground residues and from intact soil with belowground residues of different cover crop species at low temperature. Shoots and intact soil with roots from seven different cover crops were incubated for 80 days at a temperature of 5 °C. A comparison of the cover crop species revealed a wide variation in nutrient uptake, chemical composition and release of N, P and S, that also varied between shoot and intact soil with roots. Release of N from shoots showed a marked non-stoichiometric behavior, in contrast to the release of P and S, that correlated well with C:P and C:S ratios. N release (from Vicia villosa) and especially P mobilization (from legumes) in intact soil was much greater than the amounts determined in recoverable roots. This shows that unrecoverable pools such as rhizodeposits and fine roots contributed to nutrient release. Garden sorrel (Rumex acetosa) is a promising cover crop regarding uptake and mobilization of P, but also as a multifunctional cover crop for supplying N, K, S and Mg. Hairy vetch (Vicia villosa) is a promising cover crop for N, oilseed radish (Raphanus sativus) for S, P and K, and white lupin (Lupinus albus) for N, P and Mn supply. Based on our results, we propose the use of mixtures of cover crops with different N, P and S uptake and release having the potential to supply a more complete suite of nutrients to the subsequent crop.",
keywords = "Aboveground residues, Belowground residues, Cover crops, Low temperature, Nutrient release, Nutrient uptake",
author = "Veronika Hansen and J{\o}rgen Eriksen and Jensen, {Lars Stoumann} and Kristian Thorup-Kristensen and Jakob Magid",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1016/j.agee.2021.107392",
language = "English",
volume = "313",
journal = "Agro-Ecosystems",
issn = "0167-8809",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Towards integrated cover crop management

T2 - N, P and S release from aboveground and belowground residues

AU - Hansen, Veronika

AU - Eriksen, Jørgen

AU - Jensen, Lars Stoumann

AU - Thorup-Kristensen, Kristian

AU - Magid, Jakob

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Ecological intensification is crucial for arable organic farmers, in order to partly close the yield gap to conventional yields. One strategy for this is improved management of cover crops, to increase availability of both nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and sulfur (S) for the subsequent main crop. However, the potential of cover crops to take up and release nutrients has primarily been determined for aboveground biomass and mostly for N. There have been fewer studies on belowground biomass, and these have focused on recoverable roots. Thus, unrecoverable residues from rhizodeposits and nodules, have been overlooked. The aim of this incubation study was therefore to assess the release of N, P and S from aboveground residues and from intact soil with belowground residues of different cover crop species at low temperature. Shoots and intact soil with roots from seven different cover crops were incubated for 80 days at a temperature of 5 °C. A comparison of the cover crop species revealed a wide variation in nutrient uptake, chemical composition and release of N, P and S, that also varied between shoot and intact soil with roots. Release of N from shoots showed a marked non-stoichiometric behavior, in contrast to the release of P and S, that correlated well with C:P and C:S ratios. N release (from Vicia villosa) and especially P mobilization (from legumes) in intact soil was much greater than the amounts determined in recoverable roots. This shows that unrecoverable pools such as rhizodeposits and fine roots contributed to nutrient release. Garden sorrel (Rumex acetosa) is a promising cover crop regarding uptake and mobilization of P, but also as a multifunctional cover crop for supplying N, K, S and Mg. Hairy vetch (Vicia villosa) is a promising cover crop for N, oilseed radish (Raphanus sativus) for S, P and K, and white lupin (Lupinus albus) for N, P and Mn supply. Based on our results, we propose the use of mixtures of cover crops with different N, P and S uptake and release having the potential to supply a more complete suite of nutrients to the subsequent crop.

AB - Ecological intensification is crucial for arable organic farmers, in order to partly close the yield gap to conventional yields. One strategy for this is improved management of cover crops, to increase availability of both nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and sulfur (S) for the subsequent main crop. However, the potential of cover crops to take up and release nutrients has primarily been determined for aboveground biomass and mostly for N. There have been fewer studies on belowground biomass, and these have focused on recoverable roots. Thus, unrecoverable residues from rhizodeposits and nodules, have been overlooked. The aim of this incubation study was therefore to assess the release of N, P and S from aboveground residues and from intact soil with belowground residues of different cover crop species at low temperature. Shoots and intact soil with roots from seven different cover crops were incubated for 80 days at a temperature of 5 °C. A comparison of the cover crop species revealed a wide variation in nutrient uptake, chemical composition and release of N, P and S, that also varied between shoot and intact soil with roots. Release of N from shoots showed a marked non-stoichiometric behavior, in contrast to the release of P and S, that correlated well with C:P and C:S ratios. N release (from Vicia villosa) and especially P mobilization (from legumes) in intact soil was much greater than the amounts determined in recoverable roots. This shows that unrecoverable pools such as rhizodeposits and fine roots contributed to nutrient release. Garden sorrel (Rumex acetosa) is a promising cover crop regarding uptake and mobilization of P, but also as a multifunctional cover crop for supplying N, K, S and Mg. Hairy vetch (Vicia villosa) is a promising cover crop for N, oilseed radish (Raphanus sativus) for S, P and K, and white lupin (Lupinus albus) for N, P and Mn supply. Based on our results, we propose the use of mixtures of cover crops with different N, P and S uptake and release having the potential to supply a more complete suite of nutrients to the subsequent crop.

KW - Aboveground residues

KW - Belowground residues

KW - Cover crops

KW - Low temperature

KW - Nutrient release

KW - Nutrient uptake

U2 - 10.1016/j.agee.2021.107392

DO - 10.1016/j.agee.2021.107392

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85102461198

VL - 313

JO - Agro-Ecosystems

JF - Agro-Ecosystems

SN - 0167-8809

M1 - 107392

ER -

ID: 260544857