Abstract

Intensive mechanical soil cultivation and herbicide treatment was often the preferred technology in vineyards in the second half of the 20 th century. In the last decades we increasingly experienced the disadvantages of these suboptimal technologies: soil degradation, erosion and deflation damages. Alternative cultivation methods were sought for research and practice, especially in organic viticulture. The use of well-adapted cover-crop mixtures in the vine inter-rows poses a possible solution for weed control, soil conservation and biodiversity development. The technology has a special importance on steep slopes: it helps to prevent erosion damages and provides easier cultivation circumstances. In 2012 the Hungarian Research institute of Organic Agriculture in collaboration with other experts and growers began to study three different species-rich cover crop mixtures (Biocont-Ecovin, Legume mixture, Grass-herb mixture) in Hungarian vineyards. Each mixture was sown in three neighbouring inter-rows at each experimental site. After sowing (March 2012) we studied vegetation composition (June 2012, 2013 and 2014), pruning weight and diameter of the second bearing spur of the stocks, yield quality and quantity. Most of the sown species established successfully and in 2012 we found that Biocont-Ecovin and the mixture of legumes were the most effective in weed suppression. For 2013 we detected lower weed coverage in the inter-rows sown with the grass-herb and legume mixtures, while in control and Biocont-Ecovin inter-rows we detected increasing weed coverage. In the third year (2014) we found in every plot? that the grass-herb mixture-covered inter-rows were the least weedy. The most successful species in the inter-rows are: Coronilla varia, Lotus corniculatus, Medicago lupulina, Onobrychis viciifolia, Plantago lanceolata, Trifolium repens, Trifolium pratense. Viticultural measurements (2014) show a 10-13 % decrease of yield in case of covered inter-rows, and a 26 and 21 % reduction in pruning weight (Grof Degenfeld and Tokaj-Hetszőlő), especially apparent in young plantations. For Hungarian conditions it is therefore recommended to implement this technology in every second inter-row where erosion control is not required. Keywords: grapevine, cover crops, erosion, biodiversity, species rich mixtures

Highlights

  • Mechanical cultivation is one of the most frequently applied inter-row management techniques in Hungarian vineyards

  • We found that Biocont-Ecovin and Legume mixture were the most effective in weed suppression during 2012

  • Botanical results show that to the third year (2014) on most sown sites the highest total coverage was detected in the inter-rows sown with the Grass-herb mixture and Legume mixture, but these differences were significant only at two sites

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Summary

Introduction

Mechanical cultivation is one of the most frequently applied inter-row management techniques in Hungarian vineyards. Mechanical cultivation can result in several negative effects, such as soil desiccation, due to higher evaporation, decayed soil structure, erosion and nutrient loss (Aljibury and Christensen, 1972; Bauer et al, 2004; Dijck and Asch, 2002). Suboptimal intercropping systems can have negative effects on the soil moisture and on vine-growth, due to e.g. water concurrence with the vine. The use of cover crops has a special importance for providing environmentally friendly soil management solutions, especially on steep slopes and hill-valley planted vineyards. Adapted species-rich cover crop mixtures help to prevent erosion and provide easier cultivation, and have

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