Integrated Crop–Livestock Systems as a Strategy for the Sustainable Production of Corn and Soybean Grain in Tropical Sandy Soils
Deyvison de Asevedo Soares,
Gelci Carlos Lupatini,
Bianca Midori Souza Sekiya,
Gustavo Pavan Mateus,
Cristiana Andrighetto,
Viviane Cristina Modesto,
Junio Reina da Silva,
João Henrique Silva da Luz,
Fernando Shintate Galindo,
Carlos Alexandre Costa Crusciol,
Paulo Sergio Pavinato,
Marcelo Andreotti
Affiliations
Deyvison de Asevedo Soares
Associated Colleges of Uberaba—Fazu, Uberaba 38061-500, MG, Brazil
Gelci Carlos Lupatini
College of Agronomic and Technological Sciences, Sao Paulo State University “Julio de Mesquita Filho”, Dracena 17900-000, SP, Brazil
Bianca Midori Souza Sekiya
College of Agronomic and Technological Sciences, Sao Paulo State University “Julio de Mesquita Filho”, Dracena 17900-000, SP, Brazil
Gustavo Pavan Mateus
Department of Decentralized Development, Sao Paulo Agency of Agribusiness Technology, Dracena 16900-970, SP, Brazil
Cristiana Andrighetto
College of Agronomic and Technological Sciences, Sao Paulo State University “Julio de Mesquita Filho”, Dracena 17900-000, SP, Brazil
Viviane Cristina Modesto
Department of Plant Health, Rural Engineering and Soils, College of Engineering of Ilha Solteira, Sao Paulo State University “Julio de Mesquita Filho”, Ilha Solteira 15385-000, SP, Brazil
Junio Reina da Silva
College of Agronomic and Technological Sciences, Sao Paulo State University “Julio de Mesquita Filho”, Dracena 17900-000, SP, Brazil
João Henrique Silva da Luz
Department of Soil Science, “Luiz de Queiroz” College of Agriculture, University of Sao Paulo, Piracicaba 13418-900, SP, Brazil
Fernando Shintate Galindo
College of Agronomic and Technological Sciences, Sao Paulo State University “Julio de Mesquita Filho”, Dracena 17900-000, SP, Brazil
Carlos Alexandre Costa Crusciol
Department of Crop Science, College of Agricultural Sciences, Sao Paulo State University (UNESP), Botucatu 18610-034, SP, Brazil
Paulo Sergio Pavinato
Department of Soil Science, “Luiz de Queiroz” College of Agriculture, University of Sao Paulo, Piracicaba 13418-900, SP, Brazil
Marcelo Andreotti
Department of Plant Health, Rural Engineering and Soils, College of Engineering of Ilha Solteira, Sao Paulo State University “Julio de Mesquita Filho”, Ilha Solteira 15385-000, SP, Brazil
Integrated crop–livestock systems (ICLS) have sustainably intensified modern agricultural practices worldwide. This research assessed how production systems and crop types impact the chemical properties of an Oxisol in the Brazilian Cerrado, the grain yield of corn intercropped with palisade grass (Urochloa) in the off-season in an ICLS, and the grain yield (GY) of soybean in succession. Intercropped and monocropped systems were assessed in a three-year field experiment: corn + Urochloa ruziziensis–soybean; corn + U. brizantha cv. Piatã–soybean; corn + U. brizantha cv. Paiaguás–soybean (ICL–Paiaguás); corn–soybean under a no-tillage system (NTS); corn–soybean under a conventional tillage system (CTS); Piatã grass–continuous grazing (Perennial Piatã); and Paiaguás grass–continuous grazing (Perennial Paiaguás). The residual impact of phosphate fertilization was more pronounced in the ICLS treatments. In the soil layer from 0.0 to 0.2 m depth, ICLS–Paiaguás and Perennial Piatã had the most positive effects on soil chemical quality. In the last year, grain yield was highest in corn monoculture under the NTS and soybean in succession under the ICLS. ICL–Paiaguás improved soil chemical properties for soybean in succession. These results confirm that an intermittent pasture system for legume crops in sequence is an alternative that can maintain or improve soil chemical composition, and that CTS should be avoided in tropical sandy soils.