1. Introduction
Greenhouse agriculture, based on production and profitability, is becoming widespread in the Mediterranean region, with an increasing socioeconomic impact [
1]. The province of Almeria (SE Spain), with 31,034 ha, has the highest concentration of greenhouses, most of which are low or medium cost structures with plastic covers [
2,
3], dedicated to the cultivation of horticultural species. Conventional greenhouse management practices are characterized, in most cases, by the excessive use of agrochemicals and irrigation water [
4,
5], which, along with the absence of organic inputs or tillage, tends to make the soil lose quality in the long term [
6,
7,
8,
9] and has caused a series of environmental problems associated with nitrate leaching [
10,
11] or with the accumulation of a huge amount of crop residues at the end of the cropping season [
12]. These problems, coupled with the current situation of the instability of prices perceived by the farmers, which sometimes do not cover production costs [
1], endanger the future sustainability of the system.
It is, therefore, becoming necessary to introduce alternative management packages that will enable the system to reduce its dependence on external inputs [
12], while optimizing resources and reducing waste generation [
8,
13], mainly crop residues. However, agricultural greenhouse systems demand high investments per crop season that need to be compensated with income in a very short period of time; therefore, it is particularly important to carefully select indicators that allow, in the short term, an accurate assessment of the impact of new management practices on soil and crops. Several studies in outdoor and greenhouse farming have shown that the contribution of organic materials can cause significant changes in biochemical properties and alter microbial activity, improving soil quality [
14,
15,
16,
17], and has been used to meet the N demands of the crops [
18]. Del Moral et al. [
19], after a long-term trial, demonstrated that several soil physical properties were improved in organic managed greenhouses fertilized with manure, and that total organic carbon, total nitrogen and the cation exchange capacity were increased in comparison with conventional management. However, for the correct management of intensive crops in greenhouses, more information regarding the evolution of different soil quality indicators during cultivation and their impact on the harvest is necessary, covering the existing scientific information deficit for this agrosystem, while providing useful and convincing information to stakeholders.
Soil quality indicators provide information on the properties, characteristics and processes related to the soil functions and soil fertility [
20,
21,
22,
23]. Among them, biochemical indicators, because of their high sensitivity in short term, could be useful to assess the impact of any new management practice.
Although total organic carbon is the most widely used indicator to assess soil quality, soil productivity and agricultural sustainability [
24,
25], it is generally accepted that the change in its content is not very sensitive in the short and medium term [
26,
27], so labile fractions—which often include particulate organic carbon (POC), light fraction (LF), and water-soluble organic carbon (WSOC) [
28]—have been used as short-term indicators after changing soil management practices [
29,
30,
31,
32,
33,
34]. POC, LF and WSOC are three fractions considered active in the nutrient cycles, readily available for microbial breakdown and closely associated with nutrient supply to crops [
35,
36].
Enzymatic activities are also widely used indicators for their sensitivity to management change in agricultural systems, and provide information about soil microbial activity and biomass, the decomposition of organic matter, nutrient cycling, nutrient availability to crops, and other soil properties [
37,
38,
39,
40,
41,
42]. Among them, dehydrogenase (DH) and β-glucosidase (GL) are two frequently monitored enzymes [
43,
44]. DH activity, associated with the active fraction of the soil microbial community [
45], reflects recent management or seasonal effects [
46,
47]; GL catalyzes the final step in the biodegradation of cellulose [
48,
49] and has been found to be sensitive to soil management, with changes being detectable within 1–3 years [
50]. Finally, electrical conductivity (EC) is a frequently used indicator to assess the soil salinization risk [
51], and periodic soil solution nitrate analysis is important to assess the availability of N to crops in greenhouses soils [
52]. In this sense, the accumulation of chlorides and nitrates in soil solution can increase soil electrical conductivity and be harmful to crops [
53,
54].
The aim of this study was to assess the effects of a new management package—based on tillage, the use of crop residues and organic amendments with minimum inorganic fertilizer inputs—compared to a control with conventional management, during three consecutive cropping seasons, on the (i) short-term evolution of biochemical soil quality indicators, (ii) evolution of nitrate and chloride concentrations of the soil solution and (iii) crop yields in greenhouse systems.
4. Discussion
The application of organic amendments and their incorporation into the soil through tillage increases TOC levels from the first year of cultivation, achieving the desired values in greenhouse soils in the province of Almeria (>15 g kg
−1 soil) [
68], as is to be expected and as has been noted by numerous authors [
69,
70]. However, the continuous incorporation of amendments in the different seasons does not contribute to a remarkable differential increase in this indicator, which remains at the same average levels throughout the different seasons. This behavior qualifies it as suitable only for comparisons between different greenhouse management practices, but not for evaluating the variation in soil quality due to the repeated application of the same management over time. Similar results have been obtained by [
71,
72]. Tillage distributed carbon labile fractions and improved the conditions for enzyme activity in CRTMP, allowing higher mean values in all soil quality indicators in the 0–15 cm depth range, even from the first cropping season. The higher variability shown in mean values of the biochemical soil quality indicators in CRTMP may be due to changes in the soil’s physicochemical properties, soil biota activity, soil composition, and the interaction between them [
73,
74]. The considerable increases in CRTMP in the labile fractions (POC and LF) serve as an important factor in providing energy to heterotrophic microbial organisms [
75,
76] and can function as a nucleation site for microbial activity [
77], which justifies their significant correlations with soil quality indicators related to enzymatic activity (DH and GL). In this sense, the mean values of DH progressively increase as do the mean values of mineralizable substrates (POC and LF), especially in the second and third cropping seasons. POC and LF, although not equivalent, are closely related, as a part of LF can be part of POC [
78], so they are often mistakenly confused [
79], which justifies the high correlation coefficient between them. Our results suggest POC as good indicator of soil quality after a short-term change in greenhouse management due to its high sensitivity, and the high and significant correlations with the TOC, enzymatic activities and [NO
3−] of the soil solution. The labile fraction increases after organic management are consistent with other studies [
26,
80], as well as the supply of soil N for crops [
81].
Despite the considerable increase in WSOC in CRTMP compared to the initial state, it also increased considerably in CMP, with no significant differences between the management packages in some months, suggesting that it may be affected by factors other than those involved in the management practices used [
82]. Some studies support the relationship between WSOC and microbial activity, so that the microbial community can easily use energy sources such as metabolizable organic compounds, extracted as WSOC from the decomposition of the soil organic matter [
83,
84]; instead, our results show the lowest correlation of WSOC with microbial activity indicators (DH and GL).
In general, an improvement in soil enzyme activity results from increased microbial synthesis due to improved environmental conditions induced by changes in the soil’s physicochemical properties [
85,
86] and could be indicative of the mineralization of organic matter by soil microorganisms [
87]. The intracellular activity of the DH enzyme justifies the highest correlation with indicators related to organic carbon [
45,
88], while GL is present in the processes of cellulose degradation present in plant remains [
48,
89], suggesting that the DH enzyme is more sensitive to short-term management changes [
90]. Authors such as Okur et al. [
16] and Zhang et al. [
17] have reported that the contribution of organic matter to the soil causes an increase in enzymatic activity, while others [
91,
92] have reported a decrease in such activity when soils are intensively fertilized with nitrogen, as it was in CMP. These pieces of evidence allow the justification of the differences found between the different management packages tested in this trial. The increases in and correlations between enzyme activity and organic carbon indicators suggest a balanced improvement of soil biological activity, as observed by Yevdokimov et al. [
93] and Saikia et al. [
94]. These increases are detected from the first cropping season and are maintained throughout the three cropping seasons of study, even in TOC, despite this being an indicator less susceptible, in the short or medium term, to management changes [
26,
27].
The results of this study showed that the application of CRTMP, in addition to improving soil quality indicators, increased the concentration of nitrates in the soil solution. This could be due, on the one hand, to the direct contribution of soluble nitrogen salts present in the organic amendments but, on the other hand, to the mineralization of the organic matter. The proof for this is the significant correlation between the [NO
3−] of soil solution and indicators related to labile organic carbon fractions and enzymatic activity. However, CRTMP, due to the high Cl
− content of the selected organic amendments and the comparatively small amount of drainage, also significantly increased the chloride concentration of the soil solution and the soil electrical conductivity. The [Cl
−] of the soil solution and soil salinization could have effected the significantly lower total production in CRTMP compared to in CMP; in the third cropping season, moreover, significant differences were detected in the petiole sap [NO
3−]—a sensitive indicator of crop N status in the sweet pepper [
95]—in the initial stages between the management packages, contrary to in the two previous cropping seasons, and this could have influenced the significant decrease in marketable and total production. The higher crop yield in CMP can be explained because this practice provides a readily available source of N, which is one of the main factors controlling crop yield [
96], in the dripper by fertigation. Padilla et al. [
3] also observed differences in crop yields in greenhouses in Almería (Spain) with the incorporation of organic amendments, mainly due to the increase in production at the end of the cropping seasons in CMP. This higher total production in CMP at the end of the cropping season is probably related to the higher differences in petiole sap [NO
3−] detected between the management packages after the winter season. The lower values of [NO
3−] in the petiole sap in CRTMP may be related to the competition between chlorides and nitrates for uptake from the soil [
97,
98], thus decreasing nitrate uptake compared to in CMP. Other authors such as Hernández et al. [
87] achieved crop yields similar to or even higher than with conventional management in lettuce crops. Although the total production is significantly lower in CRTMP, this form of management is able to increase the fruit quality, which could economically compensate for the difference in total production due to its high value-added nature [
26,
99], as well as benefit the environment. Other authors observed better results, in terms of quality parameters, in outdoor melon crops with organic management practices compared to with conventional management [
100].
Despite the clear improvements that the CRTMP management package induces in the measured biochemical parameters, the high risk of salinization requires a reconsideration of the organic materials used together with the crop residues, as well as the establishment of irrigation schedules that help to minimize this risk [
101].
5. Conclusions
Management practices including the tillage and the contribution of crop residues and organic fertilizer in greenhouse soil increase the soil’s organic carbon and its labile fractions, thus increasing its enzymatic activity. These improvements in the biochemical indicators of soil quality in the short term occur during three consecutive cropping seasons of sweet pepper in greenhouses and in the first 15 cm of the soil, with considerable improvements from the first cropping season. POC and DH demonstrate, in this cultivation system, their double utility as indicators of soil quality. On the one hand, they will make it possible to establish whether there are differences between different management practices at any given time. On the other hand, they will make it possible to evaluate the effects produced by a change in management over time. In addition to the biochemical indicators, the concentration of nitrates in the soil solution also increases. However, the organic matter used increases the risk of soil salinization in greenhouses, by increasing the concentration of chlorides in the soil solution, and decreases the concentration of nitrates in the petiole sap, which is related to a decrease in total production but an increase in production quality. In this type of management, the optimal management of water and fertilizers is important and advisable to prevent the problem of soil salinization and also to avoid the loss of nutrients provided by organic amendments, especially at the beginning of the cropping season.
In future lines of research, it would be desirable to advance the knowledge about the behavior in greenhouses of different quality indicators—physical, chemical and biological—that allow a composite index of soil quality (SQI) related to the production of these systems to be obtained.