Introduction. In the French West Indies, farmers generally consider that
periodical soil tillage is necessary to increase soil porosity and maintain high yield.
However, in the non-tilled perennial banana plantations of the highlands, the soil
exhibits better physical and biological properties than in the conventional banana
plantations. To determine if tillage before banana planting is necessary for proper banana
crop functioning and to assess the effect of tillage on soil quality, banana planting
after conventional tillage was compared with no-till banana planting on crop residue mulch
on an experimental plot. Materials and methods. Soil quality was assessed
through indicators such as porosity, organic status, microbial biomass and structure of
nematode communities. Crop functioning was assessed through plant growth, root
distribution, and soil water and nitrogen availability. Results. We found
that tillage reduced soil microbial biomass and the number of nematode functional guilds.
Tillage had only a short-term effect on soil porosity and did not allow deeper extension
of the root system. Although soil organic nitrogen mineralization was higher with
conventional tillage, banana nitrogen nutrition was not better, probably because the high
nitrogen fertilization offset the variations in availability of nitrogen from organic
origin. We found that banana growth was better with no-till treatment. This could be
explained by less drying out of soil due to the crop residue mulch left on the soil
surface with no-till treatment. Conclusion. Relative to conventional tillage,
no-till banana planting improved soil quality and crop performance.