Jeferson Garcia Augusto, Claudia Cristina Paro de Paz, Gabriela Geraldi Mendonça, Mara Regina Moitinho, Leonardo Sartori Menegatto, Denizart Bolonhezi, Márcia Saladini Vieira Salles, Flávia Fernanda Simili
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Studies have reported improvements in soil quality in integrated crop-livestock systems (ICLS) when compared to conventional systems. The hypothesis of this study was that ICLS improve Oxisol quality due to the use of intercropping, adding pasture and cattle to the systems. The aim of the study was to evaluate the chemical and physical characteristics of an Oxisol and pasture production in the integrated system versus conventional system. We compared two conventional systems: crop system (maize grain production) and livestock system (beef cattle on single pasture) and, four ICLS: maize plus Marandu palisade grass sown simultaneously without herbicide (ICLS-1); maize plus Marandu palisade grass sown simultaneously with herbicide (ICLS-2); maize plus Marandu palisade grass in lagged sowing (ICLS-3); and maize plus Marandu palisade grass sown simultaneously in maize rows and inter-rows with herbicide (ICLS-4). A randomized block design with six treatments and three replicates was used. The results suggest improvements in soil quality, including soil organic carbon (ICLS-4), total nitrogen, and nitrogen stocks (ICLS-1, ICLS-2, and ICLS-4). The intercropping technique influenced pasture production and soil quality during the implementation of integrated systems. The lowest soil strength was obtained for the crop system compared to systems with grazing animals but there were no changes in the soil physical characteristics that could compromise the production system.
期刊介绍:
Grass and Forage Science is a major English language journal that publishes the results of research and development in all aspects of grass and forage production, management and utilization; reviews of the state of knowledge on relevant topics; and book reviews. Authors are also invited to submit papers on non-agricultural aspects of grassland management such as recreational and amenity use and the environmental implications of all grassland systems. The Journal considers papers from all climatic zones.