|
|
|
 |
Title: NITROGEN AND CARBON CYCLING AND PARTITIONING IN MANAGED UNDERSTORIES OF ORGANIC APPLES
Authors
 | Hoagland, Lori - WSU |  | Carpenter-Boggs, Lynne - WSU |  | Granatstein, David - WSU |  | Peryea, Frank - WSU |  | Reganold, John - WSU |  |
Smith, Jeffrey
|
Submitted to: Proceedings American Society of Horticultural Sciences
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: June 10, 2006
Publication Date: N/A
Technical Abstract:
Organic orchards represent a significant and growing component of Washington
state agriculture. Comparison studies have shown organic apple systems can
be equally profitable yet more environmentally sustainable than their
conventional counterparts. Despite this success,
sustainable methods of weed control, fertility, and soil quality
stabilization and improvement have remained a challenge. Intensive
cultivation is commonly used to control weeds in organic orchards. This can
lead to reduced or degraded soil organic matter, structure, water
infiltration, aerated pore space, and other soil productivity parameters. In
addition, tillage accelerates nutrient cycling and can result in the loss of
valuable nutrients from the system. To address the need for sustainable
organic methods of weed management, an integrated study of alternative
understory management options was established in a newly planted orchard in
2005. Weed control measures included efficient tillage using a Wonder
weeder, organically approved herbicide, wood chip mulch, and living cover
mulches. Three rates of nitrogen (low, medium, and high) were applied across
the Wonder weeder, wood chip, and living cover mulch plots in order to
determine ideal N fertility rate. Analyses of total C and N and N-15 in
organic fertilizers, soil pools, living cover biomass, and tree leaves are
being used to track N and C cycling and partitioning, N-use efficiency, soil
quality, and to determine optimal fertility guidelines. Preliminary results
indicate intense competition between living mulch understory and orchard
trees, and a trade-off may exist between maximizing soil quality and orchard
productivity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Last Modified: 06/19/2013
|
|