Comparing irrigated biodynamic and conventionally managed dairy farms. 1. Soil and pasture properties
L. L. Burkitt A , D. R. Small B , J. W. McDonald C , W. J. Wales D E and M. L. Jenkin DA Tasmanian Institute of Agricultural Research, University of Tasmania, PO Box 3523, Burnie, Tas. 7320, Australia.
B Environmental & Agricultural Consulting Pty Ltd, 68 Saunders Street, Kyabram, Vic. 3620, Australia.
C Veterinary & Nutrition Consultant, 82 Monds Avenue, Benalla, Vic. 3672, Australia.
D Primary Industries Research Victoria (PIRVic), 120 Cooma Road, Kyabram, Vic. 3620, Australia.
E Corresponding author. Email: bill.wales@dpi.vic.gov.au
Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 47(5) 479-488 https://doi.org/10.1071/EA05196
Submitted: 14 July 2005 Accepted: 27 July 2006 Published: 13 April 2007
Abstract
Ten paired irrigated dairy farms under biodynamic (BD) and conventional (CV) management were compared over a 4-year period (1991–94). The paired farms were located in the irrigation districts of northern Victoria and southern New South Wales and were matched for soil type, climate, cattle breed and farm area. Farms had been practising BD principles for an average of 16 years before the commencement of the study and had not received phosphorus (P) fertiliser for an average of 17 years. The effects of farm management on soil chemical and biological properties and the nutritive properties and botanical composition of pasture were examined at varying sampling times during the study.
Soil Olsen extractable P concentrations were consistently 2–3 times higher under CV management at various sampling depths (mean = 22 mg/kg, 0–10 cm), and were generally marginal under BD management in the surface 10 cm (mean = 8.5 mg/kg). Low soil extractable P concentrations were also reflected in consistently lower mean pasture P concentrations under BD management (0.25 compared with 0.35% on CV farms). Lower soil and pasture P concentrations under BD management were the result of a large negative P balance across BD farms (–17 kg P/ha.year). A mean negative P balance under BD management was a result of low P imports (2 kg P/ha.year) in comparison with large quantities of P (19 kg P/ha.year) effectively lost from the farming system through animal products, estimated losses in water runoff and slowly reversible soil P reactions. These results suggest that greater P imports are required to ensure the future sustainability of BD dairy pasture farming systems. There were few differences in soil biological properties, with earthworm weights significantly higher under CV management, but no difference in soil organic carbon, humus concentration, the weight of the organic mat or microbial biomass, between the two management systems.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Dairy Australia (formerly the Dairy Research and Development Corporation) and the Department of Primary Industries (DPI) Victoria (formerly the Department of Agriculture, Victoria) for funding this project. We sincerely thank the 20 dairy farmers who participated in this project and recognise that without this support, the project would not have been possible. We also acknowledge the biometric advice provided by Leigh Callinan and Jim Madden from the DPI. In addition, we recognise the contribution of students in this project, namely Megan Ryan (Australian National University), Andrew Daniels (Griffith University), James Lytton-Hitchins (University of NSW) and Chris Parker and Michael Cock (LaTrobe University).
Amato M, Ladd JN
(1988) Assay for microbial biomass based on ninhydrin-reactive nitrogen in extracts of fumigated soils. Soil Biology & Biochemistry 20, 107–114.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Askegaard M, Eriksen J
(2000) Potassium retention and leaching in an organic crop rotation on loamy sand as affected by contrasting potassium budgets. Soil Use and Management 16, 200–205.
Barrow NJ,
Bolland MDA, Allen DG
(1998) Effect of previous additions of superphosphate on sorption of phosphate. Australian Journal of Soil Research 36, 359–372.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Berry PM,
Stockdale EA,
Sylvester-Bradley R,
Philipps L,
Smith KA,
Lord EI,
Watson CA, Fortune S
(2003) N, P and K budgets for crop rotations on nine organic farms in the UK. Soil Use and Management 19, 112–118.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Best EK,
Manning GK, Grundon NJ
(1985) The ability of several soil extractants to identify copper-responsive wheat soils. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 25, 863–868.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
de Boer IJM
(2003) Environmental impact assessment of conventional and organic milk production. Livestock Production Sciences 80, 69–77.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Bolland MDA, Baker MJ
(1998) Phosphate applied to soil increases the effectiveness of subsequent applications of phosphate for growing wheat shoots. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 38, 865–869.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Brookes PC,
Kragt JF,
Powlson DS, Jenkinson DS
(1985) Chloroform fumigation and the release of soil nitrogen: the effects of fumigation time and temperature. Soil Biology & Biochemistry 17, 831–835.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Burkitt LL,
Gourley CJP, Sale PWG
(2004) Phosphorus auditing cannot account for all of the phosphorus applied to different pasture soils. Australian Journal of Soil Research 42, 89–98.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Burkitt LL,
Wales WJ,
McDonald JW,
Small DR, Jenkin ML
(2007) Comparing irrigated biodynamic and conventionally managed dairy farms. 2. Milk production and composition and animal health. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 47, 489–494.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Cayley JWD, Kearney GA
(1999) Changes in bicarbonate-extractable phosphorus of a basalt-derived duplex soil associated with applications of superphosphate to pasture grazed by sheep. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 50, 547–554.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Clarke T,
Flinn PC, McGowan AA
(1982) Low cost pepsin-cellulase assays for prediction of digestibility of herbage. Grass and Forage Science 37, 147–150.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Colwell JD
(1963) The estimation of the phosphorus fertiliser requirements of wheat in southern New South Wales by soil analysis. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture and Animal Husbandry 6, 105–120.
Dann PR,
Derrick JW,
Dumaresq DC, Ryan MH
(1996) The response of organic and conventionally grown wheat to superphosphate and reactive phosphate rock. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 36, 71–78.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Foissner W
(1987) The microedaphon in ecofarmed and conventionally farmed dryland cornfields near Vienna (Austria). Biology and Fertility of Soils 3, 45–49.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Fulkerson WJ, Donaghy DJ
(2001) Plant soluble carbohydrate reserves and senescence – key criteria for developing an effective grazing management system for ryegrass-based pastures: a review. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 41, 261–275.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Garcia SC, Fulkerson WJ
(2005) Opportunities for future Australian dairy systems: a review. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 45, 1041–1055.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Gillman GP, Sumpter EA
(1986) Modification to the compulsive exchange method for measuring exchange characteristics of soils. Australian Journal of Soil Research 24, 61–66.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Kirchmann H
(1994) Biological dynamic farming – an occult form of agriculture. Journal of Agricultural & Environmental Ethics 7, 173–187.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Koepf HH
(1986) Organisation, economic performance and labour requirements on bio-dynamic farms. Star and Furrow 66, 25–37.
McCaskill MR, Cayley JWD
(2000) Soil audit of a long-term phosphate experiment in south-western Victoria: total phosphorus, sulfur, nitrogen, and major cations. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 51, 737–748.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
McLaughlin MJ,
Tiller KG,
Naidu R, Stevens DP
(1996) Review: the behaviour and environmental impact of contaminants in fertilisers. Australian Journal of Soil Research 34, 1–54.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Ozanne PG,
Kirton DJ, Shaw TC
(1961) The loss of phosphorus from sandy soils. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 12, 409–423.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Penfold CM,
Miyan MS,
Reeves TG, Grierson IT
(1995) Biological farming for sustainable agricultural production. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 35, 849–856.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Reganold JP
(1995) Soil quality and profitability of biodynamic and conventional farming systems: a review. American Journal of Alternative Agriculture 10, 36–45.
Reganold JP,
Papendick RI, Parr JF
(1990) Sustainable agriculture. Scientific American 262, 112–120.
Reganold JP,
Palmer AS,
Lockhart JC, Macgregor AN
(1993) Soil quality and financial performance of biodynamic and conventional farms in New Zealand. Science 260, 344–349.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Ryan M
(1999) Is an enhanced soil biological community, relative to conventional neighbors, a consistent feature of alternative (organic and biodynamic) agricultural systems? Biological Agriculture and Horticulture 17, 131–144.
Ryan M, Ash J
(1999) Effects of phosphorus and nitrogen on growth of pasture plants and VAM fungi in SE Australian soils with contrasting fertiliser histories (conventional and biodynamic). Agriculture Ecosystems & Environment 73, 51–62.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Ryan MH,
Small DR, Ash JE
(2000) Phosphorus controls the level of colonisation by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in conventional and biodynamic irrigated dairy pastures. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 40, 663–670.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Ryan MH,
Derrick JW, Dann PR
(2004) Grain mineral concentrations and yield of wheat grown under organic and conventional management. Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture 84, 207–216.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Sale PWG,
Brown A,
Maclaren G,
Derbyshire PK, Veitch SM
(1997) Pasture environments in Australia where reactive phosphate rock will be an effective phosphate fertiliser. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 37, 1051–1060.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Vereijken P
(1986) From conventional to integrated agriculture. Netherlands Journal of Agricultural Science 34, 387–393.
Walkley A, Black A
(1934) An examination of the Degtjareff method for determining soil organic matter and a proposed modification of the chromic acid titration method. Soil Science 37, 29–38.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Watson CA,
Bengtsson H,
Ebbesvik M,
Løes AK,
Myrbeck A,
Salomon E,
Schroder J, Stockdale EA
(2002) A review of farm-scale nutrient budgets for organic farms as a tool for management of soil fertility. Soil Use and Management 18, 264–273.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Williams CH, David DJ
(1973) The effect of superphosphate on the cadmium content of soils and plants. Australian Journal of Soil Research 11, 43–56.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |