terclim by ICS banner
IVES 9 IVES Conference Series 9 GiESCO 9 Diagnosis of soil quality and evaluation of the impact of viticultural practices on soil biodiversity in a Southwestern France vineyard

Diagnosis of soil quality and evaluation of the impact of viticultural practices on soil biodiversity in a Southwestern France vineyard

Abstract

Context and purpose of the study – The soil plays a pivotal role in the agroecological transition processes, due to its numerous implications in production support, water regulation, air and nutrient supply, and its function of reservoir for the major part of planet biodiversity. Therefore, soil quality and adequate soil management are key levers for an ecologically and economically sustainable viticulture. Gascogn’Innov (2017-2022) is an Operational Group funded by the European Innovation Partnership for Agriculture. As such, it gathered winegrowers from the south-west of France (Gascony), scientists, advisors and technicians, around a project focused on the biological functioning of viticultural soil and the design of better-adapted technical paths for soil protection. The Gascogninnov project aimed firstly at acquiring references on the biological quality and biodiversity of wine-growing soils in relation to viticultural practices. It secondly intended to test a method for integrating soil bioindicators data into the management of farming systems.

Material and methods – A set of indicators of soil biological quality was evaluated in the project: microorganisms (bacteria and fungi abundance and diversity), fauna (nematodes and earthworms abundance and diversity), physico-chemical characteristics, soil structure assessment and degradation rate of organic matter. The implementation of soil quality indicators was carried out by the wine growers themselves in a participatory approach. Based on a network of 13 plots that have been subject to an initial diagnosis in 2017, several agronomical practices aiming to improve soil fertility were tested to redesign the cropping system (for instance plant cover, organic matter inputs, reduction of herbicides, mineral fertilizers). System redesign was made in collaboration with winegrowers and an interdisciplinary group of experts (agronomists, biologists). Several indicators were measured on vine and soil at each vintage to assess vine health and productivity. At the end of the project (2021), a final diagnosis was carried out.

Results – Gascogn’Innov allowed to create a regional database on the quality of wine-growing soils, which permitted to evaluate the effect of practices according to soil types. Especially, decreasing the intensity of tillage and increasing the duration and diversity of grass coverage tended to increase the abundance of all the organisms studied. This project confirmed the value of using soil biological quality indicators to drive the sustainability of practices, but also highlighted the key-role of expertise, in both agronomy and soil biology, to help winegrowers to understand and to appropriate their soil quality diagnosis.

DOI:

Publication date: July 7, 2023

Issue: GiESCO 2023

Type: Poster

Authors

Laure GONTIER1*, Mathilde JARDEL1, Christophe GAVIGLIO1, Thierry DUFOURCQ1,2

1Institut Français de la Vigne et du Vin, Pôle Sud-ouest, 1920 Route de Lisle sur tarn, 81310 Peyrole, France
2Institut Français de la Vigne et du Vin, Pôle Sud-ouest, 32100 Caussens, France

Contact the author*

Keywords

soil biological quality, biodiversity, vineyard, viticultural practice, grass cover

Tags

GiESCO | GIESCO 2023 | IVES Conference Series

Citation

Related articles…

Exploring grapevine genetic resources in a changing climate

Plant genetic resources have sustained human societies throughout history. Through selection and propagation, humans have shaped plant gene pools to enhance productivity, local adaptation, and diversity of products across continents.

Archaeogenomics reveals few generations separating ancient Eastern Mediterranean and modern Iberian grapevines over three millennia of viticulture

Viticulture became central to most western Mediterranean civilisations only a few millennia after grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) was domesticated in the South Caucasus and the Near East.

Documenting and mining disease resistance alleles in the USDA Vitis repositories

The USDAAgricultural Research Service maintains Vitis germplasm repositories in Geneva, NY and Davis, CAcollectively preserving approximately 5,000 unique accessions representing 30 Vitis species.

Study of ancient north-east Italian grape varieties taking advantage of an optimized aDNA extraction protocol

Grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) is one of the most extensively cultivated fruit trees in the world. It is cultivated primarily for wine production but also for fruit fresh consumption.

What 2,900 wild grapevines reveal about the genetic diversity of Vitis vinifera L. subsp. sylvestris

Vitis vinifera L. subsp. sylvestris is the wild ancestor of the European cultivated grapevine (V. vinifera L. subsp. sativa).