2015
DOI: 10.1007/s12155-015-9690-2
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Soil Erosion Mitigation by Perennial Species Under Mediterranean Environment

Abstract: Soils of the Mediterranean area are subjected to erosion due to the cropping systems and crop managements adopted. This causes a loss of crop productivity that could be initially replaced with an increase of fertilizers, but in the end leads to land abandonment. The areas subjected to soil erosion in the Mediterranean area cover 1,309,000 km 2 , equal to 15 % of the land of Mediterranean countries. In dry farming condition, the farmer's choices are often constrained by the prevailing climatic conditions. Rainf… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(28 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
(33 reference statements)
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“…Regarding soil properties, MPBCs enhance soil structure and reduce erosion (Blanco-Canqui et al, 2014;Cosentino et al, 2015;Blanco-Canqui, 2016;LeDuc et al, 2017;Fernando et al, 2018), owing to a dense and prolonged soil coverage, as well as deep and branched roots (Fernando et al, 2018), which hold large amounts of water and nutrients (Blanco-Canqui, 2016;Fernando et al, 2018). This, together with the high resource use efficiency of these crops (van der Weijde et al, 2013;Lewandowski, 2016;Carlsson et al, 2017) and their low or null fertilization requirements (Tilman et al, 2006;Robertson et al, 2017;Fernando et al, 2018), determines the very low levels of nutrient leaching (especially nitrogen -N) observed in MPBCs (Glover et al, 2010;Pérez-Suárez et al, 2014;LeDuc et al, 2017;Robertson et al, 2017;Fernando et al, 2018).…”
Section: Advantages Of Cultivating Mixed Perennial Lignocellulosic Crmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regarding soil properties, MPBCs enhance soil structure and reduce erosion (Blanco-Canqui et al, 2014;Cosentino et al, 2015;Blanco-Canqui, 2016;LeDuc et al, 2017;Fernando et al, 2018), owing to a dense and prolonged soil coverage, as well as deep and branched roots (Fernando et al, 2018), which hold large amounts of water and nutrients (Blanco-Canqui, 2016;Fernando et al, 2018). This, together with the high resource use efficiency of these crops (van der Weijde et al, 2013;Lewandowski, 2016;Carlsson et al, 2017) and their low or null fertilization requirements (Tilman et al, 2006;Robertson et al, 2017;Fernando et al, 2018), determines the very low levels of nutrient leaching (especially nitrogen -N) observed in MPBCs (Glover et al, 2010;Pérez-Suárez et al, 2014;LeDuc et al, 2017;Robertson et al, 2017;Fernando et al, 2018).…”
Section: Advantages Of Cultivating Mixed Perennial Lignocellulosic Crmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The soil remains undisturbed for a long time (even up to 20 years), allowing the storage of carbon from both aboveground and underground plant residues, contributing to the carbon sequestration. Carbon dioxide emission savings may reach 7 Mg CO 2 ha −1 year −1 from well-established plantations of miscanthus and giant reed [41], with calculated rates of soil organic carbon accumulation of 0.6-1.0 Mg C ha −1 year −1 in long-term giant reed stands [37]. Higher rates of CO 2 savings have been reported with miscanthus grown on marginal sites limited by cold and by drought (19.2 and 24.0 Mg CO 2 ha −1 year −1 , respectively) [42].…”
Section: Environmental Benefitsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A study by McCalmont et al (2017) [9] showed that perennial crops such as miscanthus can sequester up to 2.2 Mg ha −1 y −1 carbon over a 20-years period. Additionally, miscanthus can be cultivated on marginal lands due to its high resource-use efficiency and tolerance of various abiotic stresses [10][11][12][13][14][15]. Galatsidas et al (2018) [11] estimated the total area of marginal land suitable for miscanthus cultivation…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%