Functionally rich crop rotations increase calorie and macronutrient outputs across Europe
Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2026
Author
Vico, Giulia
Costa, Alessio
Smith, Monique E.
Bowles, Timothy
Gaudin, Amélie C. M.
Watson, Christine A.
Baldoni, Guido
Berti, Antonio
Jonczyk, Krzysztof
Mazzon, Martina
Marzadori, Claudio
Morari, Francesco
Negri, Lorenzo
Onofri, Andrea
Tenorio Pasamón, José Luis
Sandström, Boël
Santín-Montanyá, Inés
Stalenga, Jarosław
Tei, Francesco
Topp, Cairistiona F. E.
Walker, Robin L.
Bommarco, Riccardo
Faculty
Wydział Rolnictwa, Ogrodnictwa i Biotechnologii
Journal
Nature Food
ISSN
2662-1355
Volume
7
Number
2
Pages from-to
185–193
Abstract (EN)
Increased crop diversity in cereal-dominated rotations can enhance crop protection, nutrient use efficiency and climate change adaptation. Nevertheless, it is argued that replacing cereals in rotations diminishes food production, threatening food security. Here we compared outputs of calories and macronutrients (carbohydrates, proteins, fats) for human consumption from cereal monocultures, cereal-only rotations and rotations including two or three functionally distinct crop types (cereals plus root and oil crops, legumes or ley) in 16 long-term experiments across Europe. Rotations with three functional types produced more calories and macronutrients than cereal monocultures and cereal-only rotations with forage crops used to produce milk. Carbohydrate gains depended on growing conditions and crop choice. Advantages increased over time but were lost with forage crops used for beef or biofuel. Functionally rich rotations provided macronutrient proportions closer to recommended human diets. Our analysis shows no trade-off between functionally rich rotations and food production or agricultural land expansion.
License
CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
February 25, 2026