Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Soil macroaggregation drives sequestration of organic carbon and nitrogen with three-year grass-clover leys in arable rotations

Emily Guest, Lucy J. Palfreeman, Joseph Holden, Pippa J. Chapman, L. G. Firbank, Martin Lappage, Thorunn Helgason, Jonathan R. Leake

The Science of The Total Environment · 2022

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Summary

Conventional arable cropping with annual crops established by ploughing and harrowing degrades larger soil aggregates that contribute to storing soil organic carbon (SOC). The urgent need to increase SOC content of arable soils to improve their functioning and sequester atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> has motivated studies into the effects of reintroducing leys into long-term conventional arable fields. However, effects of short-term leys on total SOC accumulation have been equivocal. As soil aggregation may be important for carbon storage, we investigated the effects of arable-to-ley conversion on cambisol soil after three years of ley, on concentrations and stocks of SOC, nitrogen and their distributions in different sized water-stable aggregates. These values were benchmarked against soil fr

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.158358
Catalogue ID
SNmohi6ihd-k5zm9y
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