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Peat amendment and production of different crop plants affect earthworm populations in field soil
Authors:Sanna Kukkonen  Ansa Palojärvi  Mauritz Vestberg
Institution:a MTT Agrifood Research Finland, Plant Production Research, Horticultural Production, Laukaa Research and Elite Plant Station, Antinniementie 1, FIN-41330 Vihtavuori, Finland
b MTT Agrifood Research Finland, Environmental Research, Soils and Environment, FIN-31600 Jokioinen, Finland
Abstract:A field experiment was conducted to study the effects of peat amendment and crop production system on earthworms. The experiment was established on a field previously cultivated with oats and with silt as the main soil type. Perennial crops strawberry, timothy and caraway, and annual crops rye, turnip rape, buckwheat, onion and fiddleneck were cultivated with conventional methods. All the crops were grown with and without soil amendment with peat. Earthworms were sampled twice: 4 and 28 months after establishment of the experiment. In the former case part of the experimental plots were soil sampled and hand sorted for estimation of earthworms. In the latter case all experimental plots were sampled and both soil sampling and mustard extraction was carried out. Soil organic carbon and microbial biomass was measured at 14 and 28 months. Peat increased the abundance of juvenile Aporrectodea caliginosa by 74% in three growing seasons, but had no effect on adult numbers. Lumbricus terrestris numbers were not increased by peat treatment. Three season cultivation of caraway favoured both A. caliginosa and L. terrestris. An equal abundance of A. caliginosa was also found in plots cultivated with turnip rape and fiddleneck. Total earthworm and especially A. caliginosa numbers were very small in plastic-mulched strawberry beds. This was mainly attributed to repeated use of the insecticide endosulfan. With the strawberry plots omitted there was a significant correlation between soil microbial N measured at 14 months and juvenile Aporrectodea spp. and Lumbricus spp. numbers measured at 28 months. Adult earthworm numbers were not associated with either soil organic C or microbial biomass.
Keywords:Earthworms  Lumbricidae  Peat amendment  Soil organic carbon  Caraway  Aporrectodea caliginosa  Lumbricus terrestris
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