5 resultados para Cícero As catilinárias
Resumo:
Objetivou-se identificar as melhores populações de plantas de soja de três principais cultivares recém-lançadas para fins de recomendação aos produtores do sul de Minas Gerais. Por dois anos avaliou-se as cultivares BRSMG 760SRR, BRSMG 780RR e BRSMG 820RR, submetidas às populações 100.000, 200.000, 300.000 e 400.000 plantas por hectare, utilizando-se blocos casualizados com três repetições. Determinou-se altura de plantas e de inserção de 1° legume, índice de acamamento, n° de legumes por planta, n° de grãos por legume, peso de 100 grãos e rendimento de grãos. A cultivar BRSMG 760SRR mostrou-se superior apresentando o máximo rendimento de grãos (4.973kg ha-1) com 269.000 plantas ha-1. As demais cultivares não sofreram influência da variação populacional, podendo ser cultivadas com 200.000 plantas ha.
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2015
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2015
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ABSTRACT: Changes in carbon stocks in different compartments of soil organic matter of a clayey Latossolo Vermelho Distrófico (Typic Haplustox), caused by the substitution of native savanna vegetation (cerrado sensu stricto) by agroecosystems, were assessed after 31 years of cultivation. Under native vegetation, a stock of 164.5 Mg ha-1 C was estimated in the 0.00-1.00 m layer. After 31 years of cultivation, these changes in soil C stocks were detected to a depth of 0.60 m. In the case of substitution of cerrado sensu stricto by no-tillage soybean-corn rotation, a reduction of at least 11 % of the soil C pools was observed. However, the adoption of no-tillage as an alternative to tillage with a moldboard plow (conventional system) reduced CO2 emissions by up to 12 %.
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ABSTRACT: The study of labile carbon fractions (LCF) provides an understanding of the behavior of soil organic matter (SOM) under different soil management systems and cover crops. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of different soil management systems with respect to tillage, cover crop and phosphate fertilization on the amount of the LCF of SOM. Treatments consisted of conventional tillage (CT) and no-tillage (NT) with millet as the cover crop and a no-tillage system with velvet bean at two phosphorus dosages. Soil samples were collected and analyzed for organic carbon (OC), C oxidizable by KMnO4 (C-KMnO4), particulate OC (POC), microbial biomass carbon and light SOM in the 0.0-0.05, 0.05-0.10 and 0.10-0.20 m soil layers. The Carbon Management Index (CMI) was calculated to evaluate the impacts of soil management treatments on the quality of the SOM. The different LCFs are sensitive to different soil management systems, and there are significant correlations between them. C-KMnO4 is considered the best indicator of OC carbon lability. In the soil surface layers, the CT reduced the carbon content in all of the labile fractions of the SOM. The use of phosphorus led to the accumulation of OC and carbon in the different soil fractions regardless of the tillage system or cover crop. The application of phosphate fertilizer improved the ability of the NTsystem to promote soil quality, as assessed by the CMI.