3 resultados para Soil fertility

em Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora - Portugal


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Conservation Agriculture (CA) is mostly referred to in the literature as having three principles at the core of its identity: minimum soil disturbance, permanent organic soil cover and crop diversity. This farming package has been described as suitable to improve yields and livelihoods of smallholders in semi-arid regions of Kenya, which since the colonial period have been heavily subjected to tillage. Our study is based on a qualitative approach that followed local meanings and understandings of soil fertility, rainfall and CA in Ethi and Umande located in the semi-arid region of Laikipia, Kenya. Farm visits, 53 semistructured interviews, informal talks were carried out from April to June 2015. Ethi and Umande locations were part of a resettlement programme after the independence of Kenya that joined together people coming from different farming contexts. Since the 1970–80s, state and NGOs have been promoting several approaches to control erosion and boost soil fertility. In this context, CA has also been promoted preferentially since 2007. Interviewees were well acquainted with soil erosion and the methods to control it. Today, rainfall amount and distribution are identified as major constraints to crop performance. Soil fertility is understood as being under control since farmers use several methods to boost it (inorganic fertilisers, manure, terraces, agroforestry, vegetation barriers). CA is recognised to deliver better yields but it is not able to perform well under severe drought and does not provide yields as high as ‘promised’ in promotion campaigns. Moreover, CA is mainly understood as “cultivating with chemicals”, “kulima na dawa”, in kiswahili. A dominant view is that CA is about minimum tillage and use of pre-emergence herbicides. It is relevant to reflect about what kind of CA is being promoted and if elements like soil cover and crop rotation are given due attention. CA based on these two ideas, minimum tillage and use of herbicides, is hard to stand as a programme to be promoted and up-scaled. Therefore CA appears not to be recognised as a convincing approach to improve the livelihoods in Laikipia.

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Com o objectivo de estudar uma possível optimização da adubação mineral de trigo mole e sua interacção com estrumação, foi desenvolvido um ensaio onde, numa área com trigo mole, regado e em sementeira directa, se interagiram os 3 macronutrientes principais, com 3 níveis de estrume. Para esta interacção foram analisados vários parâmetros que resultaram em 3 parâmetros principais, produção de grão, de palha e também as extracções totais de N, P, K da cultura. De acordo com os resultados obtidos pôde-se verificar que a aplicação de estrume não revelou efeitos positivos na produção de grão/palha do trigo. A elevada fertilidade do solo em sementeira directa ofereceu à cultura uma base sustentável para o seu desenvolvimento sem que seja necessária a adubação mineral actualmente padronizada. Por fim foi evidente a importância da antecipação da 1ª cobertura realizada no trigo para o estado de afilhamento, factor que contribuiu significativamente para o sucesso da cultura; Optimization of mineral fertilizer in irrigated wheat and its interaction with the level of manure ABSTRACT: With the aim of studying the optimization of mineral fertilization of common wheat and their interaction with manure, it was developed a study where in an area with soft wheat, watered and with no tillage, we interacted 3 main macronutrients and 3 manure levels. To this interaction were analyzed several parameters that resulted in three major parameters, production of grain and straw and also the total extraction of N, P, K culture. According to the results it was observed that the application of manure did not show positive effects in the production of grain / wheat straw. The high soil fertility on direct seeding culture offered a sustainable base for its development without requiring high fertilization. Finally it was evident the importance of the anticipation of the 1st cover held in wheat, a factor that contributed significantly to the success of the crop.

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Soil is a key resource that provides the basis of food production and sustains and delivers several ecosystems services including regulating and supporting services such as water and climate regulation, soil formation and the cycling of nutrients carbon and water. During the last decades, population growth, dietary changes and the subsequent pressure on food production, have caused severe damages on soil quality as a consequence of intensive, high input-based agriculture. While agriculture is supposed to maintain and steward its most important resource base, it compromises soil quality and fertility through its impact on erosion, soil organic matter and biodiversity decline, compaction, etc., and thus the necessary yield increases for the next decades. New or improved cropping systems and agricultural practices are needed to ensure a sustainable use of this resource and to fully take the advantages of its associated ecosystem services. Also, new and better soil quality indicators are crucial for fast and in-field soil diagnosis to help farmers decide on the best management practices to adopt under specific pedo-climatic conditions. Conservation Agriculture and its fundamental principles: minimum (or no) soil disturbance, permanent organic soil cover and crop rotation /intercropping certainly figure among the possibilities capable to guarantee sustainable soil management. The iSQAPER project – Interactive Soil Quality Assessment in Europe and China for Agricultural Productivity and Environmental Resilience – is tackling this problem with the development of a Soil Quality application (SQAPP) that links soil and agricultural management practices to soil quality indicators and will provide an easy-to-use tool for farmers and land managers to judge their soil status. The University of Évora is the leader of WP6 - Evaluating and demonstrating measures to improve Soil Quality. In this work package, several promising soil and agricultural management practices will be tested at selected sites and evaluated using the set of soil quality indicators defined for the SQAPP tool. The project as a whole and WP6 in specific can contribute to proof and demonstrate under different pedoclimatic conditions the impact of Conservation Agriculture practices on soil quality and function as was named the call under which this project was submitted.