Abstract

Modern intensive agricultural systems generally focus on the productivity of monocultures. They are characterized by a low diversity of crops, with uniform and symmetrical planting layouts. They largely rely on the utilization of chemical inputs. They are widely denounced for their negative environmental impacts. In this context, the ecological intensification framework proposes the exploitation of biodiversity in order to better achieve such ecosystem services and soil conservation. Intercropping, i.e., the simultaneous growth of two or more crops mixed in the same field, appears to have the potentialities to improve the productivity, resilience capacity, and ecological sustainability of agroecosystems through the intensification of such positive interactions between plants as facilitation and niche complementarity. Cereal–legume intercropping turns out to be effective in low-N agroecosystems, since legumes have the ability to fix atmospheric nitrogen via their symbiosis with rhizobia. This fixed N, in turn, benefits the cereal through various ecological processes. The objective of the project is to improve the benefit of legumes for intercropped cereals in low-input agroecosystems through the management of plant–plant and plant–microbe interactions. The nitrogen-fixing symbiosis requires phosphorus and iron to be efficient. While these nutrients are prone to be lacking in N-limited agroecosystems, as is the case in Mediterranean agroecosystems, plant–plant interactions and rhizobacteria and mycorrhiza interactions seem to play an important role in their acquisition and efficient utilization. We propose the development of a participatory research project in four Mediterranean agroecosystems. Agronomic and environmental diagnosis will be performed in the field to assess N and P biogeochemical cycles, as well as Fe availability, in combination with the plant performances and the diversity of soil microorganisms. Molecular identification of soil microorganisms from the most productive sites will be done and research of genes for tolerance to Fe- and P-deficiencies will be realized. Glasshouse experiments involving various cultivars of cereals and legumes, as well as the previously identified microorganisms, will be done in order to disentangle the various mechanisms of nutrient acquisition, sharing, and transfer between plants. Other experiments will assess the effects of cereal–legume–microbe interactions on the development and architecture of the plant root systems and root hair development. The lines of research are integrated with a strategy of functional ecology on plant–microbe–soil interactions in the agroecosystems of Gabès (Tunisia), Boumedfaa (Algeria), Beni Mellal (Morocco), and Thessaloniki (Greece). Using multidisciplinary and innovative approaches, the program will provide novel knowledge and understanding of agroecosystem management for food production.

Highlights

  • In the coming decades, agriculture will face major challenges, as it has to increase crop productivity per land unit to feed the global growing population while reducing its footprint on the environment

  • The program we propose takes into account specificities of the Mediterranean area: the semi-arid climate; the importance of cereals and especially of durum wheat (Triticum turgidum L. subsp. durum); and the large diversity of soil and climate conditions, which requires the use of locally adapted plant cultivars and associated symbiotic microorganisms

  • Since legumes increase the abundance of rhizobia, we hypothesize that the intermingling of legume roots with cereal roots will promote the elongation of the cereal root hairs and thereby increase the root system capacity to take up nutrients

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Summary

Introduction

Agriculture will face major challenges, as it has to increase crop productivity per land unit to feed the global growing population while reducing its footprint on the environment. Intercropping is not very widespread in temperate agroecosystems but cereal legume intercrops are gaining increasing interest in low-input farming systems, especially in organic farming in Europe This practice is known to increase grain N concentration of cereal and can contribute to the development of agroecosystems that combine high productivity and ecological services [12,13]. According to Hauggard-Nielsen and Jensen [14], root facilitation is regarded as a fundamental process in the dynamics of plant communities and is important to include among other agronomic factors affecting the efficiencies of various intercropping systems These facilitative root interactions within intercropped species integrate a wide range of ecological services, each influenced by local climate and growth conditions as well as choice of species. To further understand those rhizosphere facilitation processes, besides root functional traits of each of the intercropped species, differences of functional diversity of their microbial communities might be worth investigating, especially for those relevant to N and P cycles [27,28,29]

Relevance of the Proposal
Methodology
Innovative Approach
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