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- Title
Improved soil fertility, plant nutrition and grain yield of soybean and millet following maize intercropped with forage grasses and crotalaria in the Brazilian savanna.
- Authors
Brito, Lucélia de Cássia Rodrigues de; Souza, Henrique Antunes de; Araújo Neto, Raimundo Bezerra de; Azevedo, Diógenes Manoel Pedroza de; Sagrilo, Edvaldo; Vogado, Renato Falconeres; Carvalho, Suzane Pereira; Ferreira, Ane Caroline de Melo; Cavigelli, Michel André
- Abstract
Context: Intercropping maize with tropical forages is known to provide multiple benefits for the agricultural sustainability in the Brazilian savanna. Despite that, more studies are needed to define strategies to improve soil quality and increase crop yield of subsequent crops. Aims: This study aimed to evaluate the impacts of cultivating maize in monoculture or in double- and triple-intercropping with brachiaria and crotalaria on the chemical and microbiological attributes of soil, nutritional status of soybean, and the productivity of soybean and millet in succession in the cerrado of eastern Maranhão. Methods: The intercropping systems implemented in 2017 were as follows: maize (Zea mays) + Urochloa ruzizienses (brachiaria); maize + Crotalaria juncea (crotalaria); maize + brachiaria + crotalaria; and monoculture maize as a control. In 2018 and 2019, soybean and millet were cultivated on the same plots. Key results: The triple-intercropping promoted immediate improvement in the biological and chemical attributes of the soil, especially when compared with monoculture maize. Intercropping maize with brachiaria, with or without crotalaria, increased soybean productivity by 21% and millet by 44% in the subsequent year, compared with monoculture maize system. Intercropping maize with brachiaria, with or without crotalaria, increased the leaf concentrations of nitrogen, potassium, magnesium, and sulfur of the subsequent soybean crop, suggesting improved nutrient cycling with intercropped forages. Conclusions: Intercropping maize + forage, especially brachiaria, can be recommended for crop rotation and succession systems in the Brazilian savanna. Implications: These results quantified the benefits of crop rotation following intercropping with maize and forage, which can be an alternative for farmers in the Brazilian savanna. The sustainability of grain production systems is especially challenging under tropical conditions, where high temperatures and moisture in the rainy season accelerate biogeochemical processes and soil degradation. Despite the lack of technological options for enabling sustainable grain production systems in agricultural frontiers, in this study, we showed that intercropping maize with braquiaria and crotalaria increases soil microbial activity, nutrient cycling, and grain yield of subsequent soybean and millet crops. Our results have provided a feasible option for sustainable grain production systems in eastern Maranhão.
- Subjects
SAO Luis do Maranhao (Brazil); INTERCROPPING; CATCH crops; MILLETS; SOIL fertility; PLANT nutrition; GRAIN yields; FORAGE plants; CORN
- Publication
Crop & Pasture Science, 2023, Vol 74, Issue 5, p438
- ISSN
1836-0947
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1071/CP22251