Abstract

Timing the application of organic residues and therefore the release of nutrients during decomposition may be critical to the growing crop in tropical alleycropping agroforestry systems. Field experiments were carried out in Turrialba, Costa Rica, to determine differences in Erythrina poeppigiana (Walp.) O.F. Cook leaf decomposition in 3, 9 and 18-year alleycropped agroforestry systems. Treatments consisted of mulch-only, and mulch plus Arachis pintoi Krapov. and W. Gregory var. CIAT 18347 in 3 and 9-year old alleycrops under no-till cultivation. The 18-year old site consisted of treatments with mulch-only and mulch plus chicken manure under disk plow cultivation. Litterbags, filled with E. poeppigiana leaves from 3, 9 and 18-year old trees, were placed on the soil surface and collected over a period of 84 days. Results showed no significant differences in the amount of plant residues remaining after 84 days in the 3-, 9-, and 18-year-old systems, or between the manure and mulch-only treatments. Comparing mulch-only treatments, leaves in the 18-year old system decomposed most rapidly which may be due to disk-plow cultivation practices where litterbags were in direct contact with the soil as opposed to the no-till system in the younger alleycrops.

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