Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Smart forage selection could significantly improve soil health in the tropics

Claire Horrocks, Jacobo Arango, Ashly Arévalo, Jonathan Núñez, Juan Andrés Cardoso, Jennifer A. J. Dungait

The Science of The Total Environment · 2019

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Summary

The use of tropical grasslands to graze livestock is of high economic importance. Declining grassland soil health leads to reduced sustainability of livestock systems. There are high levels of phenotypic diversity amongst tropical forage grasses. We hypothesise that this variation could lead to significant differences in soil health and that selection of forage cultivars to improve soil health could improve the sustainability of livestock production. We measured and compared key soil health metrics (soil organic carbon (SOC) concentration and sugar / alkane composition, aggregate stability, friability, litter decomposition rates, microbial community composition) under four tropical forage varieties (Brachiaria hybrid cv Mulato (BhMulato), B. humidicola cv Tully (CIAT679; Bh679), B. humidic

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.06.152
Catalogue ID
SNmohxvkb7-0zidrw
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