Título : Effectiveness of composts from decentralised composting scenarios to promote degraded soil restoration and R. officinalis drought resilience |
Autor : de Carolis, Chiara Barra-Caracciolo, Anna Álvarez-Alonso, Cristina Bustamante, María Ángeles Grenni, Paola Rolando, Ludovica Narciso, Alessandra Nogués, Isabel |
Editor : Elsevier |
Departamento: Departamentos de la UMH::Agroquímica y Medio Ambiente |
Fecha de publicación: 2025-11 |
URI : https://hdl.handle.net/11000/39493 |
Resumen :
Soil degradation and water scarcity affect crop productivity and ecosystem resilience. Biotechnological strategies
based on organic waste valorisation offer promising tools for restoring soil fertility and increasing stress tolerance.
This study evaluated the effectiveness of four composts produced under different decentralized composting
schemes: community (CA), decentralized urban (SO), small-scale agrocomposting from poultry manure (UP), and
medium-scale agrocomposting from olive pomace and pig manure (TO), in improving a degraded soil and
enhancing rosemary tolerance to drought. Soil microcosms were set up with a degraded soil and amended with
different composts. Half of the microcosms were subjected to well-watered conditions and half to water-stress
(75% and 20% of the soil water holding capacity, respectively). Composts promptly increased microbial abundance
and dehydrogenase activity. With the TO compost plant grew better than other conditions, presumably
due to its phosphorus and labile compound enrichment. Under drought stress, CA and SO composts mitigated
biomass losses, demonstrating a protective role against drought-induced stress. Soil amended with pig and
poultry-derived composts (TO and UP) introduced antibiotic resistance genes and, in the case of UP, the soil
water extracts had significant ecotoxicological effects on both Daphnia magna and Lepidium sativum. In contrast,
the CA compost - from organic fraction of municipal solid waste, yard trimmings and donkey manure - displayed
the best overall performance, enhancing plant tolerance and soil microbial functionality without ecotoxicological
effects. These findings highlight the biotechnological potential of community-scale composting as a circular and
effective approach for degraded soil recovery and crop management under water-limited conditions.
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Palabras clave/Materias: compost soil restoration drought tolerance microbial activity ARGs circular economy mediterranean soil |
Área de conocimiento : CDU: Ciencias aplicadas: Agricultura. Silvicultura. Zootecnia. Caza. Pesca: Agricultura. Agronomía. Maquinaria agrícola. Suelos. Edafología agrícola |
Tipo de documento : info:eu-repo/semantics/article |
Derechos de acceso: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional |
DOI : https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbt.2026.02.007 |
Publicado en: New Biotechnology, Vol. 93 (2026) pp. 121-129 |
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos Agroquímica y Medio Ambiente
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