Abstract

Simplified, ploughless tillage and multi-species, multifunctional crop production are important components of sustainable agriculture. Technologies that combine these components can play an even greater pro-ecological role in modern agriculture. The claim is made that row intercropping of spring barley and peas, along with strip tillage, is an alternative to traditional methods of sowing cereals and legumes. This hypothesis was verified in a three-year field experiment in which row intercropping of barley and peas (alternating every row) was compared with traditional mixed-crop, within-row cropping (plants of each species in each row) and pure sowing of each species. Row intercropping of barley and peas using strip-till, one-pass technology, as compared with mixed-crop, within-row, improved the uniformity of plant emergence and plant density of peas before harvesting and reduced weed infestation. The productivity of barley and peas was higher than with pure sowing by 8.5% and 10.2%, respectively, and the productivity of peas was also higher by 38.9% than when sowing in mixed-crop, within-row. The yield of barley grain/seeds and peas under row-intercropping was 1.75 t ha−1 higher than the yield of pea seeds with pure sowing, and 0.79 t ha−1 lower than the yield of barley in pure sowing. On the other hand, the yield of grain/seed protein under this mixture was similar to the pea protein yield with pure sowing and 109 kg ha−1 higher than the barley protein yield with pure sowing. The positive results should inspire further research to obtain a better understanding of the conditions and effects of growing grains with legumes with strip-till one-pass technology.

Highlights

  • Contemporary societies increasingly perceive the negative impact of industrial agriculture on their sustainable development [1]

  • The conducted field experiments show that strip-till one-pass technology allows for the row intercropping of multiple plant species as an alternative to traditional mixed sowing

  • Mzuri Pro-Til machines allow for individual agrotechnical practices to be adjusted, e.g., selection of plant type and different sowing depths in adjacent strips of cultivated soil. This method of sowing spring barley and peas resulted in more uniform emergence of both plant species in different field habitat conditions than mixed crop within-row

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Summary

Introduction

Contemporary societies increasingly perceive the negative impact of industrial agriculture on their sustainable development [1]. The analysis of habitat factors (soil properties, water conditions, risk of erosion), economic factors (field size, degree of mechanisation, economic size of farms) and social factors indicates that Europe and many other parts of the world are predestined for the development of conservation agriculture [8]. Its features, such as no-till methods and multifunctional crop production, are increasingly being introduced into other agricultural systems, positively influencing the environment and landscape [9,10,11]

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