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Impact of tillage practices and soil texture on soil health and earthworms in the Pannonian region: A comparative study from Austria and Hungary

Barbara Simon, Igor Ðekemati, Hanaa Ibrahim, Maxwell Maimela Modiba, Márta Birkáš, János Grósz, Martin Kulhánek, Reinhard W. Neugschwandtner, Anna Hofer, Viola Wagner, Marion Windisch, Karin Hage‐Ahmed, Kevin R. Butt, Pia Euteneuer

2025Applied Soil Ecology12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Soil tillage has major impacts on physical, chemical and biological soil parameters. Two long-term soil tillage experiments in North-East Austria (AT) and Central-North Hungary (HU), both located in the Pannonian region, were studied in 2020 and in 2021. The three soil tillage systems comprised mouldboard ploughing (P), shallow cultivation (C), and no-till (NT) in a completely randomised block design with four blocks. Major differences between AT and HU concerned clay content and pH value (clay: 20 %; 36 % and pH: 7.7; 4.5, respectively). This affected most parameters such as dissolved organic carbon, soil aggregate stability, bulk density, earthworm abundance, and biomass and Shannon index. These parameters decreased with soil tillage intensification at both sites. In addition, for all mentioned parameters, C and P were similar in AT, while in HU this was the case for NT and C. Additionally, epi-anecic Lumbricus terrestris was only found in AT, while endogeic Aporrectodea georgii was only present in HU. Arbuscular mycorrhizal root colonization was not responsive to different tillage practices when sampled in August in AT. In conclusion, reduced soil tillage such as C and NT can show similar affects towards soil health, but site-specific properties such as soil texture need to be considered for a final evaluation. • Clay/Silt in Austria (AT) is 20/53 % and pH 7.7; in Hungary (HU) 36/27 % and pH 4.5. • In AT soil physics and biology of shallow cultivator (C) were similar to plough (P). • Soil physics and biology in HU often followed a gradient of no-till (NT) > C > P. • Lumbricus terrestris was only found in AT and Aporrectodea georgii only in HU. • In AT, earthworms were associated with NT but mycorrhiza was non-responsive to tillage.

Topics & Concepts

TillageEarthwormSoil textureSoil healthEnvironmental scienceSoil biologyAgronomyTexture (cosmology)Soil managementSoil scienceSoil waterGeographySoil organic matterBiologyComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceImage (mathematics)Soil Carbon and Nitrogen DynamicsInvertebrate Taxonomy and EcologyCrop Yield and Soil Fertility
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