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Agriculture and forest: A sustainable strategy in the Brazilian Amazon
Author(s) -
Embrapa Eastern Amazon, Belém, Pará, Brazil,
Lucieta Guerreiro Martorano,
Marco Antônio Siviero,
Grupo Arboris, Dom Eliseu, Pará, Brazil,
Daiana Carolina Monteiro Tourne,
ESALQCE Piracicaba, São Paulo, Brazil,
Sabrina Benmuyal Vieira,
Grupo Arboris, Dom Eliseu, Pará, Brazil,
David R. Fitzjarrald,
Carlos Alberto Vettorazzi,
ESALQUSP, Piracicaba, São Paulo, Brazil,
S. Brienza,
Embrapa Eastern Amazon, Belém, Pará, Brazil,
Jorge Alberto Gazel Yeared,
Forest Management, Head of Embrapa Amapá, Macapá, Amapá, Brazil,
Élio Meyering,
Grupo Arboris, Dom Eliseu, Pará, Brazil,
Leila Sheila Silva Lisbôa,
Sciences at ESALQ, Belém, Pará, Brazil
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
australian journal of crop science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.304
H-Index - 44
eISSN - 1835-2707
pISSN - 1835-2693
DOI - 10.21475/ajcs.2016.10.08.p7727
Subject(s) - monoculture , agroforestry , agriculture , hectare , amazon rainforest , sustainability , tillage , productivity , environmental science , slash and burn , agricultural science , agronomy , geography , biology , ecology , macroeconomics , economics , archaeology
Large-scale agriculture is increasing in anthropogenically modified areas in the Amazon Basin. Crops such as soybean, maize, oil palm, and others are being introduced to supply the world demand for food and energy. However, the current challenge is to enhance the sustainability of these areas by increasing efficiency of production chains and to improve environmental services. The Amazon Basin has experienced a paradigm shift away from the traditional slash-and-burn agricultural practices, which offers decision makers the opportunity to make innovative interventions to enhance the productivity in previously degraded areas by using trees to ecological advantage. This study describes a successful experiment integrating the production of soybean and parica (Glycine max L. and Schizolobium amazonicum) based on previous research that indicated potential topoclimatic zones for planting parica in the Brazilian state of Para. This paper shows that a no-tillage system reduces the effects of drought compared to conventional tillage still used by many farmers in the region. The integrated system was implemented during the 2014/2015 season in 234.6 ha in the high-potential zone in the municipality of Ulianopolis, Para. Both soybean and parica were planted simultaneously. Parica was planted in 5 m x 2 m inter-tree spacing totaling 228x10 3 trees per hectare and soybean, in 4 m x 100 m spacing, distributed in nine rows with a 0.45 m inter-row distance, occupying 80% of the area. The harvested soybean production was 3.4 t ha -1 , higher than other soybean monocultures in eastern Para. Parica benefited from soybean fertilization in the first year: It exhibited rapid development in height (3.26 m) and average diameter (3.85 cm). Trees and crop rotation over the following years is six years for forest species and one year for each crop. Our results confirm there are alternatives to the current production systems able to diminish negative impacts resulting from monoculture. In addition, the system provided environmental services such as reduced soil erosion and increased carbon stock by soil cover with no-tillage soybean cultivation. The soybean cover contributes to increased parica thermal regulation and lower forestry costs. We concluded that innovative interventions are important to show local farmers that it is possible to adapt an agroforest system to large-scale production, thus changing the Amazon.

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