Perenniality and diversity drive output stability and resilience in a 26-year cropping systems experiment

Type de document
journalArticle
Langue source
-- Langue source --
Titre
Perenniality and diversity drive output stability and resilience in a 26-year cropping systems experiment
Titre français
Titre anglais
Auteur(s)
  • SANFORD Gregg R.
  • JACKSON Randall D.
  • BOOTH Eric G.
  • HEDTCKE Janet L.
  • PICASSO Valentin
Editeur(s)
Autre(s)
Id
SRXR85CS
Version
3102
Date ajout
8 avril 2021 16:01
Date modification
8 avril 2021 16:01
Résumé
Sustainable cropping systems should be both stable and resilient to erratic and extreme climate, while remaining profitable and providing critical ecosystem services. Stable cropping systems exhibit minimal interannual variability while resilient systems remain productive under disturbances. It is unclear however which cropping system charataristics (e.g., perenniality, diversity, management) contribute the most to stability or resilience. Using a 26-year experiment we calculated food-energy output from five cropping systems typical of the North Central U.S.: continuous maize, maize-soybean under minimum tillage, organic maize-soybean-wheat system, and two forage rotations including maize and alfalfa. We found that output was greatest for non-organic maize rotations, followed by the forage rotations and the organic grain system. Output improved in all systems over time and was more stable in systems with a greater degree of perenniality. Soil health indicators were positively associated with both stability and perenniality. More diverse cropping systems exhibited greater resilience in the face of drought, due in part to having less maize in rotation. Perennial and diverse cropping systems are critical to sustainable food production, especially under increasingly erratic climate patterns, and should be actively promoted by policy.
Note
None
CRAW tags
  • AB - Modalité bio
  • FREDO adaptation aux changements globaux
  • FREDO biologie et travail du sol
  • FREDO durabilité
  • GEO Etats-Unis
WEB tags
  • agroecosystem
  • diversity
  • perenniality
  • resilience
  • soil health
  • stability
Titre de la publication
Field Crops Research
Volume
263
Pages
108071
Date caractères
April 1, 2021
Date publication
1 avril 2021
Doi
10.1016/j.fcr.2021.108071 Le DOI est une URL unique de référencement d'une publication. Il est donc plus fiable et permanent qu'une URL classique
Issn
0378-4290 L’ISSN est un code de 8 chiffres servant à identifier les journaux, revues, magazines, périodiques de toute nature et sur tous supports, papier comme électronique.