Agriculture (Aug 2024)

Conservation Practices Boost Soil-Protected Organic Carbon Stocks in Olive Orchards

  • Evangelina Pareja-Sánchez,
  • Pablo Domouso,
  • Beatriz Gómez-Muñoz,
  • María T. Heras-Linares,
  • Roberto García-Ruíz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14081354
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
p. 1354

Abstract

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Carbon farming practices are pivotal for enhancing soil organic carbon (SOC) storage in agricultural systems. This study focuses on evaluating the effects of spontaneous cover crops as a conservation strategy compared to conventional management practices on total, non-protected, and protected SOC fractions, as well as carbon saturation, in olive groves across 13 paired sites (26 sites in total) in Andalucía, Spain. The research evaluates organic carbon concentrations in different soil fractions: non-protected (250–2000 µm), physically protected (53–250 µm), and chemically protected (−1 compared to 29.7 Mg C ha−1 in BS, and non-protected carbon at 10.3 Mg C ha−1 versus 4.8 Mg C ha−1. A direct relationship was identified between total SOC and both protected and non-protected carbon fractions, indicating that the soil of the studies olive orchards is far from being saturated in protected SOC. Moreover, the soil of the CC olive farms had a lower carbon saturation deficit (45.3%) compared to BS (67.2%). The findings show that maintaining the cover crops in olive orchards significantly contributed to carbon sequestration and reduced carbon saturation deficits by increasing the stocks of protected SOC.

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