Rev. Bras. Ciênc. Solo.2024;48:e0230141.

Forage and macronutrient accumulation in grass-legume intercropping in a warm climate

Antonia Marta Sousa de Mesquita ORCID logo , Roberto Cláudio Fernandes Franco Pompeu ORCID logo , Magno José Duarte Cândido ORCID logo , Marcos Neves Lopes ORCID logo , Marcos Cláudio Pinheiro Rogério ORCID logo , Tibério Sousa Feitosa ORCID logo , Hosana Aguiar Freitas de Andrade ORCID logo , Hilário de Júnior Almeida ORCID logo , Henrique Antunes de Souza ORCID logo

26/Jul/2024

DOI: 10.36783/18069657rbcs20230141

Graphical Abstract

Graphical Abstract

Highlights

Signalgrass-butterfly pea intercropping has the higher forage accumulation rate.

Signalgrass-butterfly pea intercropping pea favored forage accumulation.

Macronutrient demand was different among the intercropping combinations.

Forage and macronutrient accumulation in grass-legume intercropping in a warm climate

ABSTRACT

Diversifying pastures with forage legumes may reduce nitrogen fertilization due to biological N fixation. This study aimed to quantify forage accumulation rate and macronutrients extraction and to identify the best intercropping combination between butterfly pea (Clitoria ternatea) – a legume, and three warm-season forage grasses of different growth habits (signalgrass – Urochloa decumbunes, Guinea grass – Mega thyrsus maximus, and bermudagrass Cynodon dactylon). Treatments consisted of mixes of perennial herbaceous legume, butterfly pea (twining stem), with grasses, signalgrass (decumbent stem) and Guinea grass (erect stem), and bermudagrass (stoloniferous/rhizomatous). The experiment was arranged in a randomized complete block design, with three treatments and three replications. There was interaction between the intercropping combinations and cutting cycles for forage accumulation rate (FAR) and N, P, K, Ca, Mg, and S uptake. Phosphorus and K uptake was reduced from the second cycle onwards, except for the signalgrass-butterfly pea intercropping, whose reduction was only from the third cycle. Conversely, the signalgrass-butterfly pea and bermudagrass-butterfly pea intercropping did not differ from each other in relation to total N concentration in soil, but the signalgrass-butterfly pea intercropping showed total N concentration in soil higher than that of Guinea grass-butterfly pea intercropping. A higher predominance of the N-NH4+ form was observed in the soil. Grass-legume intercropping increased the demand for nutrients, which makes it indispensable to verify the export of macronutrients to know when to supply these nutrients removed from the soil solution.

Forage and macronutrient accumulation in grass-legume intercropping in a warm climate

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