L'élevage bovin indispensable à la pérennité des grandes cultures ? Tentative de réponse dans le territoire du Parc naturel des Plaines de l'Escaut
Delcampe, Julie
Promotor(s) : Rollin, Frederic
Date of defense : 27-Jun-2022 • Permalink : http://hdl.handle.net/2268.2/15101
Details
Title : | L'élevage bovin indispensable à la pérennité des grandes cultures ? Tentative de réponse dans le territoire du Parc naturel des Plaines de l'Escaut |
Translated title : | [fr] Cattle breeding essential for the sustainability of field crops? An attempt to answer this question in the territory of the Natural Park of Scheldt Plains |
Author : | Delcampe, Julie |
Date of defense : | 27-Jun-2022 |
Advisor(s) : | Rollin, Frederic |
Committee's member(s) : | Sartelet, Arnaud
Martinelle, Ludovic Bayrou Calixte |
Language : | French |
Number of pages : | 55 |
Keywords : | [en] Cattle breeding, Total organic carbon levels |
Discipline(s) : | Life sciences > Veterinary medicine & animal health |
Institution(s) : | Université de Liège, Liège, Belgique |
Degree: | Master en médecine vétérinaire |
Faculty: | Master thesis of the Faculté de Médecine Vétérinaire |
Abstract
[en] Cattle breeding, adopted in the Neolithic for the production of milk/meat and the supply of
natural fertilisers for the soil by cattle manure, is however abandoned in favour of field crops.
This specialization and intensification of agricultural production threatens the state of our
soils. Several parameters are evaluated to objectively assess the state of soil fertility. This
work focuses on the total organic carbon of the soil as well as the various essential nutrients
(organic nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium). Total organic carbon is essential for many key
soil functions. It thus determines the quality and fertility of a soil. The factors influencing its
dynamics are numerous but this work focuses on the effects of the contribution of organic
matter to the soil in the form of cattle manure. Grasslands also play a critical role in
sequestering total organic carbon. The Natural Park of Scheldt Plains, located on the silty,
sandy-silty and Campine Hennuyère agricultural regions, is seeing large-scale crops spread to
the detriment of cattle farms. This territory presents general deficiencies in the different
nutrients studied within the two study groups (farms with and without cattle) applying
livestock effluents on their agricultural soils. However, deficiencies are accentuated in the
agricultural land of farms without cattle. These nutrient deficiencies appear to decrease with
increasing amounts of manure applied. However, despite the use of organic and/or mineral
fertilizers, the state of soil fertility seems difficult to maintain. Grazed grassland soils have
higher total organic carbon and organic nitrogen levels than cropland but deficiencies remain.
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