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Abdelrahman, H.; Cocozza, C.; Olk, D.C.; Ventrella, D.; Miano, T. |
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Title |
Carbohydrates and Amino Compounds as Short-Term Indicators of Soil Management: Soil |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2017 |
Publication |
Clean Soil Air Water |
Abbreviated Journal |
Clean Soil Air Water |
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45 |
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1 |
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757 |
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The objective of this work was to evaluate the suitability of carbohydrates and amino compounds in soil and soil organic matter (SOM) fractions to depict the management-induced changes in soil over short-term course. Soil samples were collected from two experimental fields managed according to organic farming regulations and a sequential fractionation procedure was applied to separate the light fraction (LF), particulate organic matter (POM), and mobile humic acid (MHA). Contents of carbohydrates and amino compounds were determined in soil and correspondent SOM fractions. Over a 2-year course, carbohydrate contents decreased in the LF fraction while it increased noticeably in the POM and slightly in the MHA fractions leading into questioning whether decomposing materials get incorporated into older fractions. Amino N content constituted up to 30% of total soil N, with a major contribution of the humic fraction (MHA). Although the LF, POM, and MHA fractions showed the greatest amino N content after the compost-legumes combinations, the carbohydrate and amino N contents in the POM and MHA fractions of the unamended soil increased as large as the corresponding fertilized plots, underlining that conservative soil management results in accumulation of labile forms of soil C and N that consequently might build up soil fertility. The changes after different treatments suggest the suitability of carbohydrates and amino compounds as short-term indicators for soil management. |
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1863-0650 |
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CropM, ftnotmacsur |
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MA @ admin @ |
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4993 |
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Author |
Abdelrahman, H.M.; Olk, D.C.; Dinnes, D.; Ventrella, D.; Miano, T.; Cocozza, C. |
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Title |
Occurrence and abundance of carbohydrates and amino compounds in sequentially extracted labile soil organic matter fractions |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2016 |
Publication |
Journal of Soils and Sediments |
Abbreviated Journal |
Journal of Soils and Sediments |
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16 |
Issue |
10 |
Pages |
2375-2384 |
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Keywords |
Light fraction; Mobile humic acid; Organic farming; Particulate organic matter; SOM sequential extraction |
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Purpose The study aimed to describe the carbohydrates and amino compounds content in soil, the light fraction (LF), the >53 μm particulate organic matter (POM), and the mobile humic acid (MHA) fraction and to find out whether the carbohydrates and amino compounds can be used to explain the origin of SOM fractions. Materials and methods Soil samples were collected from two agricultural fields managed under organic farming in southern Italy. The LF, the POM, and the MHA were sequentially extracted from each soil sample then characterized. Seven neutral sugars and 19 amino compounds (amino acids and amino sugars) were determined in each soil sample and its correspondent fractions. Results and discussion The MHA contained less carbohydrate than the LF or the POM but its carbohydrates, although dominated by arabinose, were relatively with larger microbial contribution as revealed by the mannose/xylose ratio. The amino compounds were generally less in the LF or the POM than in the MHA, while the fungal (aspartic and serine) and bacterial (alanine and glycine) amino acids were larger in the MHA than in the LF or the POM, underlining the microbial contribution to the MHA. Results from both sites indicated that total carbohydrates content decreased moving from the LF (younger fraction) to the MHA (older fraction), which seems to follow a decomposition continuum of organic matter in the soil-plant system. Conclusions The study showed that the MHA is a labile humified fraction of soil C due to its content of carbohydrates and concluded that the content of carbohydrates and amino compounds in the LF, the POM and the MHA can depict the nature of these fractions and their cycling pattern and response to land management. |
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1439-0108 |
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CropM, ftnotmacsur |
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4992 |
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Bernardoni, E.; Acutis, M.; Ventrella, D. |
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Long-term durum wheat monoculture: modelling and future projection |
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2012 |
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Italian Journal of Agronomy |
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Ital. J. Agron. |
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7 |
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1 |
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13 |
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2039-6805 1125-4718 |
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CropM, ftnotmacsur |
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MA @ admin @ |
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4468 |
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Giglio, L.; Ventrella, D. |
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Vulnerabilità di frumento duro e pomodoro ed analisi di adattamento agronomico ai cambiamenti climatici nel territorio agricolo Pugliese. In: De Mastro G.; Ventrella D.; Verdini L. (Eds). 2012 Atti dell 480-482 |
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2012 |
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XLI Convegno annuale Società Italiana di Agronomia, Bari, Italy, 2012-09-19 to 2012-09-21 |
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2457 |
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Gobin, A.; Kersebaum, K.; Eitzinger, J.; Trnka, M.; Hlavinka, P.; Takáč, J.; Kroes, J.; Ventrella, D.; Marta, A.; Deelstra, J.; Lalić, B.; Nejedlik, P.; Orlandini, S.; Peltonen-Sainio, P.; Rajala, A.; Saue, T.; Şaylan, L.; Stričevic, R.; Vučetić, V.; Zoumides, C. |
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Title |
Variability in the Water Footprint of Arable Crop Production across European Regions |
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Journal Article |
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2017 |
Publication |
Water |
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Water |
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9 |
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2 |
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93 |
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Crop growth and yield are affected by water use during the season: the green water footprint (WF) accounts for rain water, the blue WF for irrigation and the grey WF for diluting agri-chemicals. We calibrated crop yield for FAO’s water balance model “Aquacrop” at field level. We collected weather, soil and crop inputs for 45 locations for the period 1992–2012. Calibrated model runs were conducted for wheat, barley, grain maize, oilseed rape, potato and sugar beet. The WF of cereals could be up to 20 times larger than the WF of tuber and root crops; the largest share was attributed to the green WF. The green and blue WF compared favourably with global benchmark values (R² = 0.64–0.80; d = 0.91–0.95). The variability in the WF of arable crops across different regions in Europe is mainly due to variability in crop yield (c̅v̅ = 45%) and to a lesser extent to variability in crop water use (c̅v̅ = 21%). The WF variability between countries (c̅v̅ = 14%) is lower than the variability between seasons (c̅v̅ = 22%) and between crops (c̅v̅ = 46%). Though modelled yields increased up to 50% under sprinkler irrigation, the water footprint still increased between 1% and 25%. Confronted with drainage and runoff, the grey WF tended to overestimate the contribution of nitrogen to the surface and groundwater. The results showed that the water footprint provides a measurable indicator that may support European water governance. |
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2073-4441 |
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CropM, ft_macsur |
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MA @ admin @ |
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4988 |
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