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Different Cover Crops Affect Nitrogen Fluxes in Mediterranean Vineyard
Author(s) -
Sulas Leonardo,
Mercenaro Luca,
Campesi Giuseppe,
Nieddu Giovanni
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
agronomy journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.752
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1435-0645
pISSN - 0002-1962
DOI - 10.2134/agronj2017.05.0283
Subject(s) - cover crop , vineyard , agronomy , legume , crop , biology , tillage , horticulture
Core Ideas Burr medic cover crop supplied 125 kg ha –1 year –1 of fixed N to the vineyard. Twice the N needs of grapevine annual organs were satisfied by legume cover crop. Legume cover crop promoted + 25% of total N compared to grass cover crop.Compared to traditional soil tillage, the establishment of cover crops in Mediterranean vineyards has several advantages such as better soil fertility; however, vigor and N concentration of grapevine [ Vitis vinifera (L.)] organs may be affected. A 3‐yr experiment was performed in Sardinia (Italy) to: (i) quantify the N fixation ability by burr medic [ Medicago polymorpha (L.)] grown in a vineyard and its potential benefit for grapevines; (ii) compare the effects of different management systems (grass or legume cover crop vs. soil tillage) on grapevines. Total N fixed by burr medic was 125 kg ha −1 yr −1 and it was twice as high as the N contents of grapevine annual organs. Soil tillage promoted higher cluster and cane dry matter (+38% and +31%), compared to cover crop treatments. Legume cover crop induced higher N concentration in leaves and canes. The N content detected in grapevine annual plant growth with the legume cover crop reached 61 kg ha −1 yr −1 . According to an indirect 15 N dilution approach, the higher 15 N enrichments detected in organs of grapevines, did not indicate that legume N was utilized by grapevine. However, lower 15 N enrichment was occasionaly detected, indicating 6 and 13% of N derived from legume in clusters and canes, respectively. Compared to grapevines with grass cover, the N contribution from legume cover, estimated by the N‐difference method, induced 24, 24, and 31% of N increase in leaves, clusters, and canes, respectively. The increases corresponded to 10% of legume fixed N.