posted on 2021-05-04, 09:22authored byMarcela P. Costa, Moritz Reckling, Dave Chadwick, Robert M. Rees, Sophie Saget, Michael Williams, David Styles
Introducing legumes to crop rotations could contribute toward healthy and sustainable
diet transitions, but the current evidence base is fragmented across studies that evaluate
specific aspects of sustainability and nutrition in isolation. Few previous studies have
accounted for interactions among crops, or the aggregate nutritional output of rotations,
to benchmark the efficiency of modified cropping sequences. We applied life cycle
assessment to compare the environmental efficiency of ten rotations across three
European climatic zones in terms of delivery of human and livestock nutrition. The
introduction of grain legumes into conventional cereal and oilseed rotations delivered
human nutrition at lower environmental cost for most of the 16 impact categories
studied. In Scotland, the introduction of a legume crop into the typical rotation reduced
external nitrogen requirements by almost half to achieve the same human nutrition
potential. In terms of livestock nutrition, legume-modified rotations also delivered more
digestible protein at lower environmental cost compared with conventional rotations.
However, legume-modified rotations delivered less metabolisable energy for livestock per
hectare-year in two out of the three zones, and at intermediate environmental cost for one
zone. Our results show that choice of functional unit has an important influence on the
apparent efficiency of different crop rotations, and highlight a need for more research to
develop functional units representing multiple nutritional attributes of crops for livestock
feed. Nonetheless, results point to an important role for increased legume cultivation in
Europe to contribute to the farm and diet sustainability goals of the European Union’s
Farm to Fork strategy.
Funding
Study on Aerodynamic Characteristics Control of Slender Body Using Active Flow Control Technique