Terclim 2026 banner
IVES 9 IVES Conference Series 9 Terclim 9 Terclim 2026 9 Terclim 2026 – Session 2: Multi-disciplinary approaches for integrated terroir research 9 Cover crops and conservation tillage can improve under-vine soil microbial communities without compromising yield and quality

Cover crops and conservation tillage can improve under-vine soil microbial communities without compromising yield and quality

Abstract

In the recent decades, vineyards have been managed using herbicides and intensive tillage to eliminate competition of adventitious vegetation for resources. However, these practices can negatively impact soil health. Intensive tillage often leads to the loss in soil structure and organic matter, and can decrease microbial biodiversity in soil vineyards (Abad et al., 2021), while herbicides can contaminate the soils and alter microorganism communities. In this context, the use of under-vine cover crops emerges as an alternative to improve soil characteristics and to increase microbial community diversity (Abad et al., 2023). The aim of this study was to evaluate these alternatives (conservation tillage (CT); Trifolium fragiferum cover crop (CC)) to under-vine herbicide application (HB) on grapevine water status, vegetative growth, yield, berry quality and soil bacterial and fungal communities. The experiment was set-up in a Tempranillo vineyard located in Navarra (Spain) over three consecutive seasons (2023-2025).

The impact of under-vine soil managements was dependent on the growing season. In this regard, grapevine water status measured as stem water potential (ψstem) was scarcely affected by treatments except in 2024, when HB showed the highest values of ψstem. These differences in water status caused changes in vegetative growth, CT and CC showing decreased values of aggregate shoot sections.  Soil management under the vines did not affect yield during the first two seasons, CT vines showing lower values in 2025. Regarding berry quality parameters, little effect was observed, excepting for TSS and total anthocyanin values measured in 2024, when the values observed in CT and CC tended to decrease.

Microbial communities were affected by treatments according to the amplicon sequencing of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene (V4 region) and the fungal ITS1 region performed in 2024. Data revealed that under-vine management did not affect bacterial richness, while composition shifted slightly, with treatments explaining only a small part of the variation among samples. Regarding fungal communities, CC increased their diversity and had only a weak effect on modifying fungal composition. Additionally, results showed that CT increased mycorrhizal species richness compared to HB presumably by the higher diversity in adventitious species. Similarly, CC tended to increase mycorrhizal diversity – compared to HB– in soils and enhanced the root mycorrhizal colonization rate observed under the microscope. Altogether, our results show that alternatives to under-vine herbicide application, such as conservation tillage and cover crops, can improve biological soil health without substantially compromising grapevine yield and berry quality.

References

Abad, F.J., Marín, D., Imbert, B., Virto, I., Garbisu, C & Santesteban, L.G.  2023. Under-vine cover crops: Impact on physical and biological soil proprieties in an irrigated Mediterranean vineyard. Scientia Horticulturae, 311, 111797. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scienta.2022.111797

Abad, J., Hermoso de Mendoza, I., Marín, D., Orcaray, L & Santesteban, L.G. 2021. Cover crops in viticulture. A systematic review (1): Implications on soil characteristics and biodiversity in vineyard. OENO One,55(1), 295-312. https://doi.org/10.20870/oeno-one.2021.55.1.3599

Acknowledgements

This work was conducted within the frame of two projects, CUALVID funded by Navarra Government (project PC044-045_CUALVID) and MYKOVINE project funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (REF PID2023-151788OA-I00). N. Torres is beneficiary of a Ramón y Cajal Grant RYC2021-034586-I funded by MCIN/AEI/ 10.13039/501100011033 and by “European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR”. Maider Velaz and Mónica Galar-Martínez are beneficiaries of pre-doctoral fellowships from the Universidad Pública de Navarra (UPNA). Special thanks to Nahiara Juanena and Aitziber Larrea from Bodega Otazu for their assistance during measurements and maintenance of the experimental setup.

Publication date: June 29, 2026

Issue: Terclim 2026

Type: Oral

Authors

Maider Velaz1,2,*, Luis Gonzaga Santesteban1,2, Maite Loidi1, Haizea Romeo1, Mónica Galar-Martínez1, Ana Fernandez-Morales1,2, Angie L. Gámez3, María Ancín3, Iker Aranjuelo3, Nazareth Torres1,2

1 Dept. of Agronomy, Biotechnology and Food Science, Public University of Navarre, Campus Arrosadia, 31006, Pamplona, Navarra, Spain

2 Institute for Multidisciplinary Research in Applied Biology (IMAB-UPNA), Public University of Navarre, Campus Arrosadia, 31006 Pamplona, Spain

3 Institute of Agrobiotechnology (IdAB), Spanish National Research Council (CSIC)–Government of Navarre, Avenida Pamplona 123, 31192 Mutilva, Spain

Contact the author*

Keywords

arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), grapevine, herbicide, soil management

Tags

IVES Conference Series | terclim | Terclim 2026

Citation

Related articles…

Dating of old vineyards: A multidisciplinary, non-invasive approach for age validation developed in Campo de Borja (Spain)

The present study aims to develop a multidisciplinary method capable of estimating the age of vineyards within the Protected Designation of Origin (P.D.O.) Campo de Borja in a probabilistic manner.

Investigating impact of terroir on sensory perception of wines made from hybrid grape cultivar ‘Marquette’

In this study we investigated the impact of geography, soil type, and harvest date on grape quality traits (e.g., cluster development, cluster architecture, fruit quality, and wine quality).

Microclimatic effects of tree-based infrastructures in vineyards: A multisource approach combining remote sensing and in situ measurements

Vineyards are particularly sensitive to climatic extremes, especially heatwaves and frost events, whose frequency and intensity are increasing.

High-resolution agroclimatic projections for assessing climate change impacts on French viticulture for the 2030, 2040, and 2050 horizons

Agriculture is extremely vulnerable to climate change. Increases in air temperature, altered rainfall patterns, and more frequent extreme events are key climate impacts influencing crop yields, safety, and quality.

Classic versus integral mean temperature calculations in the estimation of the Winkler index

The use of bioclimatic indexes is a common practice to evaluate the suitability of regions for specific crops or cultivars, particularly in viticulture.