Abstract

With the adoption of integrated production systems, relative gains in soybean yield have been achieved due to the permanence of vegetal residues on the soil surface. These residues favour the soil microbiota responsible for the decomposition of organic matter and nutrient cycling, which makes integrated agrosystems sustainable. The objective of this study was to evaluate the agronomic characteristics of soybeans under the production and decomposition of sunflower and Paiaguas palisadegrass biomass in different integrated production systems. The experiment was conducted off season in a dystroferric Red Latosol soil in a randomized block experimental design with four replicates. The treatments consisted of the following forage systems: monocropped sunflowers; monocropped Paiaguas palisadegrass; row sunflowers x Paiaguas palisadegrass; inter-row sunflowers x Paiaguas palisadegrass; and oversown sunflowers x Paiaguas palisadegrass. The results showed that the monocropped sunflower and Paiaguas palisadegrass presented the highest biomass production throughout the soybean development cycle, with the slowest decomposition, representing a strategy to increase soil cover efficiency mainly in the period prior to summer planting. The soybean cultivated in the biomass of the monocropped Paiaguas palisadegrass and the Paiaguas palisadegrass intercropped in rows and in inter-rows presented better yields and was positively influenced by the production parameters compared with soybean cultivated otherwise. Therefore, sunflower intercropped with Paiaguas palisadegrass during the off season in the Central-West Region of Brazil was shown to be a promising and sustainable cultivation technique for the production of biomass for no-tillage systems.

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