Abstract

Regenerative agriculture aims to improve soil health and promote biodiversity while producing nutritious food profitably. Almonds are the dominant crop in California agriculture in terms of acreage and revenue generated. We examined the soil health, biodiversity, yield, and profit of regenerative and conventional almond production systems that represented farmer-derived best management practices. Regenerative practices included abandoning some or all synthetic agrichemicals, planting perennial ground covers, integrating livestock, maintaining non-crop habitat, and using composts and compost teas. Total soil carbon (TSC), soil organic matter (SOM), total soil nitrogen (TSN), total soil phosphorous, calcium, sulfur, and soil health test scores were all significantly greater in regenerative soils. Water infiltrated regenerative soils six-fold faster than conventional soils. Total microbial biomass, total bacterial biomass, Gram+ bacteria, and Actinobacteria were significantly greater in regenerative soils. There was more plant biomass, species diversity, and percent cover in regenerative orchards. Invertebrate richness and diversity, and earthworm abundance and biomass were significantly greater in regenerative orchards. Pest populations, yields, and nutrient density of the almonds were similar in the two systems. Profit was twice as high in the regenerative orchards relative to their conventional counterparts. No one practice was responsible for the success of regenerative farms; their success was the result of simultaneously combining multiple regenerative practices into a single, functional farm system. This style of farming may assist in combatting planetary scale problems (e.g., climate change, biodiversity loss, agricultural pollution, chronic human health problems, and declining rural communities) while making farms more profitable and resilient.

Highlights

  • Regenerative agriculture can be defined as an “approach to farming that uses soil conservation as the entry point to regenerate and contribute to multiple provisioning, regulating and supporting services, with the objective that this will enhance the environmental, and the social and economic dimensions of sustainable food production” (Schreefel et al, 2020)

  • Of the soil quality and biological community metrics, only microbial and actinobacteria biomass were significantly correlated with the second principal component, with none of the management practices significantly correlating to the second principal component (Figure 7)

  • Overall almond nutrient levels and yields were equivalent in the two treatments

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Summary

Introduction

Regenerative agriculture can be defined as an “approach to farming that uses soil conservation as the entry point to regenerate and contribute to multiple provisioning, regulating and supporting services, with the objective that this will enhance the environmental, and the social and economic dimensions of sustainable food production” (Schreefel et al, 2020). The principles of regenerative agriculture are similar to those of conservation agriculture and consist of minimizing soil disturbance, eliminating or reducing agrichemical use, eliminating spatio-temporal bare soil events, maximizing plant diversity, and integrating livestock into a cropping operation. As of 2017, 2,386 ha, only 73 farms (

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