About this Research Topic
A sustainable management of agroecosystems is based on multidisciplinary research that integrates knowledge from different fields such as soil science, agronomy, microbiology, OMICS, biotechnology, economics, etc. An efficient agroecosystem should be able to produce high quality food with minimal soil disturbance, using fewer chemical fertilizers and pesticides, increasing soil organic matter and natural fertility over time, improving the soil microbial community and the ecosystem biodiversity over time.
Agricultural systems adopting no-tillage, cover crops, and crop rotations, for example, can improve ecosystem biodiversity and soil organic matter content, consequently enhancing soil natural fertility and the biodiversity of microbial communities.
Soil microbiome composition and diversity can be an important bioindicator of soil quality and can be also used to monitoring and compare different agricultural systems.
This Research Topic is intended to solicit high quality, original research on the following or alternatively-related subject matters:
- Soil microbiome
- Soil microbial diversity
- Crop rotation and cover crops influence on soil microbial community
- Tillage and no-tillage effects on soil microbiome
- Soil metagenomes of agroecosystems
Keywords: OMICS, plant and soil microbiomes, sustainable food production, biopesticides, crop rotation, soil amendments, plant growth promoting microorganisms
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.