Lori Martina, Symnaczik Sarah, Mäder Paul, De Deyn Gerlinde, Gattinger Andreas
Department of Soil Sciences, Research Institute of Organic Agriculture (FiBL), Frick, Switzerland.
Karl-Glöckner-Str. 21 C, Justus-Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, Germany.
PLoS One. 2017 Jul 12;12(7):e0180442. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0180442. eCollection 2017.
Population growth and climate change challenge our food and farming systems and provide arguments for an increased intensification of agriculture. A promising option is eco-functional intensification through organic farming, an approach based on using and enhancing internal natural resources and processes to secure and improve agricultural productivity, while minimizing negative environmental impacts. In this concept an active soil microbiota plays an important role for various soil based ecosystem services such as nutrient cycling, erosion control and pest and disease regulation. Several studies have reported a positive effect of organic farming on soil health and quality including microbial community traits. However, so far no systematic quantification of whether organic farming systems comprise larger and more active soil microbial communities compared to conventional farming systems was performed on a global scale. Therefore, we conducted a meta-analysis on current literature to quantify possible differences in key indicators for soil microbial abundance and activity in organic and conventional cropping systems. All together we integrated data from 56 mainly peer-reviewed papers into our analysis, including 149 pairwise comparisons originating from different climatic zones and experimental duration ranging from 3 to more than 100 years. Overall, we found that organic systems had 32% to 84% greater microbial biomass carbon, microbial biomass nitrogen, total phospholipid fatty-acids, and dehydrogenase, urease and protease activities than conventional systems. Exclusively the metabolic quotient as an indicator for stresses on microbial communities remained unaffected by the farming systems. Categorical subgroup analysis revealed that crop rotation, the inclusion of legumes in the crop rotation and organic inputs are important farming practices affecting soil microbial community size and activity. Furthermore, we show that differences in microbial size and activity between organic and conventional farming systems vary as a function of land use (arable, orchards, and grassland), plant life cycle (annual and perennial) and climatic zone. In summary, this study shows that overall organic farming enhances total microbial abundance and activity in agricultural soils on a global scale.
人口增长和气候变化对我们的粮食和农业系统构成挑战,并为农业集约化程度的提高提供了依据。一个有前景的选择是通过有机农业实现生态功能集约化,这是一种基于利用和增强内部自然资源及过程来保障和提高农业生产力,同时将负面环境影响降至最低的方法。在这一概念中,活跃的土壤微生物群对各种基于土壤的生态系统服务起着重要作用,如养分循环、侵蚀控制以及病虫害调节。多项研究报告了有机农业对土壤健康和质量(包括微生物群落特征)的积极影响。然而,到目前为止,尚未在全球范围内对有机农业系统与传统农业系统相比是否包含更大且更活跃的土壤微生物群落进行系统量化。因此,我们对现有文献进行了荟萃分析,以量化有机和传统种植系统中土壤微生物丰度和活性关键指标的可能差异。我们总共将来自56篇主要经过同行评审的论文的数据纳入分析,包括149对来自不同气候区且实验持续时间从3年到100多年不等的比较。总体而言,我们发现有机系统的微生物生物量碳、微生物生物量氮、总磷脂脂肪酸以及脱氢酶、脲酶和蛋白酶活性比传统系统高32%至84%。仅作为微生物群落压力指标的代谢商不受农业系统影响。分类亚组分析表明,轮作、在轮作中种植豆科植物以及有机投入是影响土壤微生物群落大小和活性的重要农业实践。此外,我们表明有机和传统农业系统之间微生物大小和活性的差异会因土地利用(耕地、果园和草地)、植物生命周期(一年生和多年生)以及气候区的不同而变化。总之,本研究表明总体而言有机农业在全球范围内提高了农业土壤中的总微生物丰度和活性。