Soil health check-up of conservation agriculture farming systems in Brazil

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Abstract

Conservation agriculture has been promoted as the main strategy to regenerate soil life but its effect on soil enzyme activity remains little documented. This study investigated the β-glucosidase and arylsulfatase enzymes as tools to evaluate soil health at the field level. Croplands in four main grain-producing states in Brazil were selected for this study. In each cropland, three environments (high yield (HYE), medium yield (MYE), and low yield (LYE)) were delineated for soil sampling to determine soil chemical attributes and enzyme activity. In one of these fields with a large temporal database, soil DNA characterization was also undertaken. The two soil enzymes investigated were affected by a range of soil attributes and the most important of these were identified. Around 40% of the data points sampled had low soil organic matter content; these were associated with low enzyme activity. Furthermore, in HYE there was more biodiversity and a higher presence of plant-growth promoters, while in LYE there were more plant pathogenic organisms.

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Passinato, J. H., Amado, T. J. C., Kassam, A., Acosta, J. A. A., & Amaral, L. de P. (2021). Soil health check-up of conservation agriculture farming systems in Brazil. Agronomy, 11(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11122410

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