Interests and limits
Factors studied |
Positive effects |
Negative effects |
|
Work organization |
- Reduction in weeding time (60% less with paper mulching on yams in the West Indies, 50% less with RCW in market gardening in Guyana). - Ease of harvesting for certain crops (salads). - Decreased tillage time before planting and the time required for planting taros ( Colocasia esculenta ) or planting corn ( Zea mays ) and cane peas ( Vigna unguiculata ). |
- Increased working time for installation. - Need for grinding at the end of cultivation for plant mulch. - Ensure the availability of equipment (example: kraft paper in Guyana). |
|
Economy |
- Decrease in the cost of labor for manual weeding or treatments. - Reduction in the cost of herbicide treatments. - Reduction of water consumption. |
- Necessary expenditure for the purchase of manufactured mulch. - Expense for the manufacture of mulch. |
|
Agronomy |
- Acceleration of crop growth in some cases by attenuating thermal variations. - Longer maintenance of soil moisture which favors the fauna and flora of the soil. - Protection of the soil structure against the erosive effect of rain. - Enrichment of the soil with organic matter in the case of plant mulch - Reduction of the risk of contamination of leaves and fruits in market gardening by certain soil-borne pests (Sclerotinia and Rhizoctonia in lettuce and melon). - Reduction of leaching. |
- Difficulty in evaluating the dynamics of nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium restitution. - Reduction, for plastic mulch by partial solarization effect, of the emergence rate of young yam shoots. - In some cases, growth retardation with plant mulch (nitrogen starvation). - Ignorance of the side effects of species that can be used in plant mulch in French Guiana (allelopathic effect for example). - Favoring the nesting of rodents by mulching made up of the accumulation of mowed tall grass (possible damage to crops or polyethylene irrigation pipes). |
|
Product qualities |
- Better visual aspect due to the cleanliness of the harvested products (less soil). - Less herbicide residues. - Technique usable in Organic Agriculture for biodegradable mulches. |
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Environment |
- Fight against erosion. - Preservation of water quality due to less use of herbicides. - No polluting elements in the kraft paper which can therefore be left in place or buried without affecting the quality of the soil. |
- Increase in runoff and accentuation of erosion in the case of impermeable mulching. - Difficulties in recovering used plastics and recycling them (non-biodegradable film). |
|
Energy consumption |
- Reduction of fuel consumption if mulching is manual and replaces phytosanitary treatments. |