Trade-offs in organic nutrient management strategies across mixed vegetable farms in Southwest British Columbia

Author:

Norgaard Amy E.,Lewis DeLisa,Borden Kira A.,Krzic Maja,Carrillo Juli,Smukler Sean M.

Abstract

Balancing economic and environmental objectives can present trade-offs for organic farmers maximizing crop yields while maintaining core principles of ecology and health. A primary challenge for achieving this balance is nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) management. Meeting crop N requirements with compost can build soil carbon (C) and soil health but often over-applies P and increases soil P and associated environmental risks. Alternatively, high-N organic fertilizers can provide N without surplus P but can be expensive and lack C inputs that composts supply. We evaluated these potential trade-offs in 2-year field trials on 20 mixed vegetable farms across three regions of Southwest British Columbia, Canada, capturing a range of climatic-edaphic conditions and organic amendments. Three nutrient management strategies were evaluated: High Compost: compost applied to meet crop N removal, Low Compost + N: compost applied to meet crop P removal plus an organic fertilizer to meet crop N removal, and Typical: varying combinations of composts and/or organic fertilizers (“typical” nutrient application on the farm). Nutrient strategies were evaluated in terms of yield, input costs, and soil properties [permanganate oxidizable C (labile C responsive to soil management), and post-season available N and P]. Soil P was 21% higher with High Compost than Low Compost + N. In one region characterized by inexpensive but nutrient-rich composts and soils high in P, input costs were lowest with Typical, but in the second year, High Compost outperformed Typical in crop yield. Principal component analysis showed a divergence in post-season NO3- between nutrient strategies in relation to compost and soil properties: High Compost using high-N composts increased post-season NO3- (0–30 cm), whereas relative yields in High Compost tended to be higher on farms with lower soil C and lower C:N composts, while yields with Typical were higher under opposite conditions but associated with higher post-season NO3-. Combining input types (e.g., Low Compost + N) can meet environmental objectives in reducing surplus soil P without short-term yield or cost trade-offs compared to High Compost. However, maintaining soil C needs to be investigated to achieve effective ecological nutrient management in organic vegetable production with improved nutrient balances.

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Horticulture,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Agronomy and Crop Science,Ecology,Food Science,Global and Planetary Change

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