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Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of agricultural inputs on soil organisms—a review

E. K. Bünemann, +2 more
- 18 Jul 2006 - 
- Vol. 44, Iss: 4, pp 379-406
TLDR
In this paper, the authors summarized the current understanding of how agricultural inputs affect the amounts, activity, and diversity of soil organisms, including mineral fertilisers, organic amendments, microbial inoculants, and pesticides.
Abstract
External agricultural inputs such as mineral fertilisers, organic amendments, microbial inoculants, and pesticides are applied with the ultimate goal of maximising productivity and economic returns, while side effects on soil organisms are often neglected. We have summarised the current understanding of how agricultural inputs affect the amounts, activity, and diversity of soil organisms. Mineral fertilisers have limited direct effects, but their application can enhance soil biological activity via increases in system productivity, crop residue return, and soil organic matter. Another important indirect effect especially of N fertilisation is soil acidification, with considerable negative effects on soil organisms. Organic amendments such as manure, compost, biosolids, and humic substances provide a direct source of C for soil organisms as well as an indirect C source via increased plant growth and plant residue returns. Non-target effects of microbial inoculants appear to be small and transient. Among the pesticides, few significant effects of herbicides on soil organisms have been documented, whereas negative effects of insecticides and fungicides are more common. Copper fungicides are among the most toxic and most persistent fungicides, and their application warrants strict regulation. Quality control of organic waste products such as municipal composts and biosolids is likewise mandatory to avoid accumulation of elements that are toxic to soil organisms.

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Citations
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Distinct soil microbial diversity under long-term organic and conventional farming

TL;DR: The throughput and resolution of the sequencing approach permitted to detect specific structural shifts at the level of individual microbial taxa that harbours a novel potential for managing the soil environment by means of promoting beneficial and suppressing detrimental organisms.
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Heavy metals and soil microbes

TL;DR: There have been many advances in the ecotoxicological assessment of metals and their effects on soil organisms but major gaps in knowledge and theory remain with regard to how microorganisms are exposed and respond to metals in soils.
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Cropping practices manipulate abundance patterns of root and soil microbiome members paving the way to smart farming.

TL;DR: It is found that about 10% of variation in microbial communities was explained by the tested cropping practices, which presents the basis towards developing microbiota management strategies for smart farming.
Journal ArticleDOI

Meeting the demand for crop production: the challenge of yield decline in crops grown in short rotations

TL;DR: Gaps are identified in understanding of yield decline, particularly with respect to the complex interactions occurring between the different components of agro‐ecosystems, which may well influence food security in the 21st Century.
Journal ArticleDOI

Opportunities and challenges in the subsoil: pathways to deeper rooted crops

TL;DR: Adaptation to Al toxicity, hypoxia, and P deficiency are intensively researched, adaptation to soil hardness and suboptimal temperature less so, and adaptations to Ca deficiency and Mn toxicity are poorly understood, but the utility of specific phene states may vary among soil taxa and management scenarios.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An extraction method for measuring soil microbial biomass c

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of fumigation on organic C extractable by 0.5 m K2SO4 were examined in a contrasting range of soils and it was shown that both ATP and organic C rendered decomposable by CHCl3 came from the soil microbial biomass.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organic matter and water-stable aggregates in soils

TL;DR: In this article, the effectiveness of various binding agents at different stages in the structural organization of aggregates is described and forms the basis of a model which illustrates the architecture of an aggregate.

The Pesticide Manual

Journal ArticleDOI

Soil Microbiology and Biochemistry

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an overview of the role of soil in the formation and evolution of Soil Microbiology and Biochemistry in Perspective, as well as its relationship with Soil Organisms.
Book

Soil microbiology and biochemistry.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an overview of the role of soil in the formation and evolution of Soil Microbiology and Biochemistry in Perspective, as well as its relationship with Soil Organisms.
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