Abstract

Management practices, including use of organic and inorganic fertilizers, significantly affect soil organic carbon (SOC) pool and agronomic yield. Crop yields in semi-arid regions of Turkey are declining because of depletion of SOC pool and the attendant decline in soil quality. Thus, this study was conducted to assess the effects of inorganic and organic fertilizer treatments (control, chemical fertilizer, animal manure, compost and compost + mycorrhizal inoculation) on SOC pool and agronomic yield in a long-term field experiment initiated in 1996 on the Mediterranean coast of Turkey. The SOC pool under different soil fertilizer management treatments was related to agronomic yield of pepper, wheat and maize. Biomass production increased as the SOC concentration increased with the application of organic and mineral (inorganic) fertilizers compared with the control. Between 1996 and 2010, the SOC concentration in 0-15 cm depth of the unfertilized control decreased from 0.96% to 0.87%. In comparison, SOC concentration increased in treatments amended with organic fertilizers such as manure, compost and compost+mycorrhzae. Agronomic yield was also significantly affected by Original Research Article American Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 4(9): 1086-1102, 2014 1087 organic and inorganic fertilizer treatments, which declined over time in the control but increased in treatments receiving compost, manure and compost + mycorrhizae. The negative regression was obtained in control treatments between SOC and the wheat yield (Y = -1.18x + 3.84, R=0.205) and maize yield (Y = -1.28x + 7.56, R=0.016). Additional research is needed to assess the role of fertilizers on SOC concentration and its effects on agronomic yields under long-term soil and crop management systems especially with mycorrhizal inoculation.

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