Frontiers
It's a win-win situation for the environment and the economy when it comes to introducing legumes into agricultural systems, says new research published in Frontiers in Plant Science, carried out by an international team of scientists as part of the European Union project, Legume Futures.
Currently Europe's crop production is highly specialized in only
a small number of plant species, to the detriment of the environment. Cereal
crops dominate, meaning Europe imports over 70% of its protein feed stocks to
support the meat industry.
"The introduction of legumes such as clovers, lupins,
lucerne and faba beans can increase the sustainability of agriculture and the
supply of protein in Europe," stated Moritz Reckling of the Leibniz Centre
for Agriculture Research (ZALF) in Germany and lead author of this study.
Legumes are protein-rich and would provide relief for the deficit; they also
increase the amount of nitrogen available to plants through biological nitrogen
fixation, reducing the need for fertilisers.
With less than 2% of European arable land currently used to grow grain legumes, Reckling and co-workers created a model to determine the effects of integrating legumes into cropping systems. The team set out to evaluate the trade-offs between environmental and economic effects of legume integration.
To demonstrate applicability in different regions, they used
five case study areas in Europe with contrasting climatic conditions and
cropping systems.
Reckling explained: "legumes are seen to be generally
beneficial to the environment, but they are not economically attractive to
farmers when compared as single crops, so we wanted to look at the gross
margins of crop rotations when legumes are integrated."
The team confirmed the environmental benefits to introducing
legumes and found that in such cropping systems, overall nitrous oxide
emissions reduced by approximately 20-30% and fertilizer use was down by 25% to
almost 40% in some cases.
The systems developed did not show increased nitrate
leaching into groundwater supplies, and in some systems with forage legumes
leaching was even reduced.
Most significantly, the gross margins evaluated show an increase
in all of the forage agriculture systems modelled, and in two out of the five
arable systems.
"When comparing the trade-offs between environmental and
economic effects, the study shows that positive environmental effects do not
necessarily mean that gross margins go down," concluded Reckling.
Contrary to popular belief, these findings show that the
benefits of diversifying cropping systems through the inclusion of legumes can
be both environmental and economic. Based on real case-study regions, the
results demonstrate great potential for implementation.