Agronomy (May 2023)

Increasing Legume Input through Interseeding Cover Crops: Soil and Crop Response as Affected by Tillage System

  • Nelly Centurión,
  • Ignacio Mariscal-Sancho,
  • Mariela Navas,
  • José Luis Gabriel,
  • Kelly Ulcuango,
  • Miguel Ángel Ibáñez,
  • Ana Moliner,
  • Chiquinquirá Hontoria

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy13051388
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 1388

Abstract

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Legumes provide important benefits in rotations. Interseeding cover crops (CCs) allows an additional legume CC in case of a short window after the main crop. However, legume input level and management could modify the expected benefits. In a Mediterranean irrigated agroecosystem, we evaluated the responses of topsoil (0–10 cm) and early maize development to increasing legume CC input in a biannual maize–wheat rotation under traditional tillage (TT; CC incorporated) and minimum tillage (MT; CC rolled-crimped). In the third year, at two early maize stages, we tested three legume input levels: (i) R0, non-CC; (ii) R1, barley–vetch CC; (iii) R2, vetch interseeded into maize in addition to the CC mixture. Overall, MT enhanced soil properties, but frequently conditioned to legume input level. The tillage system affected R1 the most, with MTR1 showing the better overall soil response while TTR0 showed the poorest. MTR2 was the best combination for early maize development, but not for soil health. Moreover, a better overall soil health did not lead to a better early maize performance in the short term. In this alkaline soil, CC favored early maize growth, whereas mycorrhization, enhanced under TT, favored crop nutrition. Increased legume input under MT should be monitored to avoid negative effects in soil in the mid–long term.

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