Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 90 (2002) 155–168
A comparison of environmental, soil fertility, yield, and
economical effects in six cropping systems based
on an 8-year experiment in Norway
Ragnar Eltun
∗
, Audun Korsæth, Olav Nordheim
Apelsvoll Research Centre, The Norwegian Crop Research Institute, N-2849 Kapp, Norway
Received 10 March 2000; received in revised form 14 February 2001; accepted 15 February 2001
Abstract
Development of environmentally and economically sound agricultural production systems is an important aim in agricul-
tural policy and has a high priority in agricultural research worldwide. The present work uses results from the first complete
crop rotation period (1990–1997) of the Apelsvoll cropping system experiment in south-eastern Norway to discuss the effect
of cropping systems and their management practices on environment, soil fertility, crop yields and the farm economy, and how
this knowledge may be used to develop a more sustainable agriculture. The experiment includes conventional arable (CON-A),
integrated arable (INT-A), ecological arable (ECO-A), conventional forage (CON-F), integrated forage (INT-F) and ecological
forage (ECO-F) cropping systems which were established on model farms of 0.2 ha. On the basis of nutrient runoff, soil erosion
and pesticide contamination, the following ranking from the most to the least favourable was made for environmental effects:
INT-F > ECO-F > ECO-A > INT-A > CON-F > CON-A. Environmental effects such as N and P runoff losses were very
much linked to the proportion of ley in the system. Thus, major improvements to reduce the effects of agriculture on nutrient
runoff, cannot be achieved without changing the cropping systems in the direction of more mixed farming with reduced crop-
ping intensity. The nutrient balance calculations showed that there were considerable deficits in the ecological systems, a fact
which must be taken into consideration in the development of sustainable ecological cropping systems. The yield reduction ex-
perienced with integrated and ecological cropping, relative to conventional cropping, was smaller for forage crops and potatoes
than for cereals. This suggests that it is easier to maintain the yield level by reduced cropping intensity in mixed farming sys-
tems with livestock than in arable farming systems without livestock. Because of the premium prices and government subsidies
to ecological farming, the economic results were equally good in the ecological systems as in the conventional ones. Economi-
cally, integrated farming was less favourable than the other systems. It is concluded that, overall, integrated and ecological
forage systems results in the least environmental harm, and based upon the present government subsidies, the forage systems
also seem the most profitable, along with the ecological arable system. © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Conventional cropping; Ecological cropping; Economy; Environment; Integrated cropping; Soil fertility; Sustainability; Yield;
Norway
∗
Corresponding author. Tel.: +47-61-16-69-00;
fax: +47-61-16-69-01.
E-mail address: ragnar.eltun@planteforsk.no (R. Eltun).
1. Introduction
As in most of the industrialised countries (Robbins,
1989) there have, during the period after the Second
World War, been great changes in the management
practices and the regional distribution of agricultural
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