{rfName}

Indexed in

License and Use

Licencia

Analysis of institutional authors

Grimplet, JeromeAuthor

Share

December 22, 2025
Publications
>
Article
No

Immediate effects of reduced tillage on soil health in a rainfed vineyard under Mediterranean conditions

Publicated to: Applied Soil Ecology. 218 106740- - 2025-12-19 218(), DOI: 10.1016/j.apsoil.2025.106740

Authors:

Mirás-Avalos, J. M., Araujo, E. S., Grimplet, J., Julián-Lagunas, C., Ksouri, N., & González García, V.
[+]

Abstract

Vegetation covers emerged as a sustainable alternative to tillage in Mediterranean vineyards due to their beneficial effects on soil health. However, grapevine growers remain concerned about the establishment of these covers as they may compete with vines for water and nutrients. Recent studies suggest that occasional tilling such as every other year, may mitigate some of the drawbacks associated with maintaining cover crops in Mediterranean vineyards. However, the immediate impact of such tillage operations has not been fully quantified. In this study, we evaluated the short-term impact of reduced tillage on soil health indicators in a Mediterranean rainfed vineyard that had been managed with spontaneous vegetation cover for the previous five years. Tillage led to ~25 % decrease in available water capacity in the topsoil. Organic matter content declined by 22 % while the concentrations of potassium and nitrate increased. Soil microbial biomass, basal respiration, enzyme activities, and diversity of microarthropods were significantly reduced (up to 50 %) under tillage compared to the resident vegetation treatment. Metataxonomic profiling analysis of bacterial and fungal communities revealed compositional and structural differences depending on soil management. Bacterial communities consistently exhibited higher diversity compared to fungal communities across treatments. Interestingly, the microbiome associated with bare soils appeared to be more complex and diverse compared to soils under vegetation cover. Overall, our findings demonstrated that even a short-term tillage can rapidly degrade multiple dimensions of soil health thereby underscoring the ecological value of spontaneous vegetation cover as a sustainable alternative to tillage in Mediterranean vineyards.
[+]

Keywords

Agricultura sostenibleCubierta vegetalLabranza mínimaMejora de suelosMicrobiomasViticultura

Quality index

Bibliometric impact. Analysis of the contribution and dissemination channel

The work has been published in the journal Applied Soil Ecology due to its progression and the good impact it has achieved in recent years, according to the agency WoS (JCR), it has become a reference in its field. In the year of publication of the work, 2025, it was in position 9/48, thus managing to position itself as a Q1 (Primer Cuartil), in the category Soil Science.

[+]

Awards linked to the item

This study forms part of the AGROALNEXT programme and was supported by MCIN with funding from European Union NextGenerationEU (PRTR-C17.I1).
[+]

Related Items