Soil fertility in organic farming systems - fundamentally different?

Stockdale, E. A., Shepherd, M. A., Fortune, S. and Cuttle, S. P. (2002) Soil fertility in organic farming systems - fundamentally different? Soil Use and Management, 18 (Suppl.). pp. 301-308. 10.1079/SUM2002143
Copy

Soil fertility is defined as the ability of a soil to provide the conditions required for plant growth. It is a result of the physical, chemical and biological processes that act together to provide nutrients, water, aeration and stability to the plant, as well as freedom from any substances that may inhibit growth. Within this definition, it is useful to distinguish between those components of fertility which change relatively slowly, perhaps over the course of a rotation, or in some cases, decades, and the more immediate contribution from materials such as fertilizers and manures. The term 'inherent fertility' is used to describe these more stable characteristics, while recognising that they are, to a large extent, products of soil management. We conclude that, although nutrient management in organically managed soils is fundamentally different to soils managed conventionally, the underlying processes supporting soil fertility are not. The same nutrient cycling processes operate in organically farmed soils as those that are farmed conventionally although their relative importance and rates may differ. Nutrient pools in organically farmed soils are also essentially the same as in conventionally managed soils but, in the absence of regular fertilizer inputs, nutrient reserves in less-available pools will be of greater significance.

mail Request Copy

picture_as_pdf
Stockdale_et_al-2002-Soil_Use_and_Management.pdf
subject
Published Version
lock
Restricted to Repository staff only
Creative Commons Attribution
Available under Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

Request Copy

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core MODS OPENAIRE METS OpenURL ContextObject Data Cite XML OpenURL ContextObject in Span MPEG-21 DIDL HTML Citation RIOXX2 XML ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads