Carbon and Water Balances in a Watermelon Crop Mulched with Biodegradable Films in Mediterranean Conditions at Extended Growth Season Scale

Author:

Ferrara Rossana M.1ORCID,Azzolini Alessandro1,Ciurlia Alessandro1,De Carolis Gabriele1ORCID,Mastrangelo Marcello1,Minorenti Valerio1,Montaghi Alessandro2,Piarulli Mariagrazia1,Ruggieri Sergio1ORCID,Vitti Carolina1ORCID,Martinelli Nicola1,Rana Gianfranco1

Affiliation:

1. Council for Agricultural Research and Economics, Agriculture and Environment Research Centre (CREA-AA), 70125 Bari, Italy

2. National Research Council of Italy (CNR), Institute of Research on Terrestrial Ecosystems (IRET), 50019 Sesto Fiorentino, Italy

Abstract

The carbon source/sink nature and the water balance of a drip-irrigated and mulched watermelon cultivated under a semi-arid climate were investigated. Biodegradable films, plants and some fruits were left on the soil as green manure. The study spanned from watermelon planting to the subsequent crop (June–November 2023). The eddy covariance technique was employed to monitor water vapor (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes, which were partitioned into transpiration, evaporation, photosynthesis and respiration, respectively, using the flux variance similarity method.This method utilizesthe Monin–Obukhov similarity theory to separate stomatal (photosynthesis and transpiration) from non-stomatal (respiration and evaporation) processes. The results indicate that mulching films contribute to carbon sequestration in the soil (+19.3 g C m−2). However, the mulched watermelon crop presented in this study functions as a net carbon source, with a net biome exchange, representing the net rate of C accumulation in or loss from ecosystems, equal to +230 g C m−2. This is primarily due to the substantial amount of carbon exported through marketable fruits. Fixed water scheduling led to water waste through deep percolation (approximately 1/6 of the water supplied), which also contributed to the loss of organic carbon via leaching (−4.3 g C m−2). These findings recommend further research to enhance the sustainability of this crop in terms of both water and carbon balances.

Funder

Italian Ministry of Agricultural, Food and Forestry Policies

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference72 articles.

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