FERTILIZERS IN AGROFORESTRY SYSTEMS

被引:19
作者
SZOTT, LT
KASS, DCL
机构
[1] IRDC, CATIE, Latin American Agroforestry Network, Turrialba
[2] Program in Sustained Agricultural Production, CATIE, Turrialba
关键词
ALLEY CROPPING; FERTILIZATION; HOME GARDENS; NUTRIENT CYCLING; ORGANIC FERTILIZER; SHADED PERENNIALS;
D O I
10.1007/BF00704913
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
This review encompasses results of fertilization experiments on several agroforestry systems - alley cropping, perennial shade systems, home gardens in which fertilizer use is a likely management alternative. Fertilizer response was found to be most common in alley cropping, variable in perennial shade systems, and rarely reported in home gardens. Level of nutrient removal in harvested products is probably the overriding factor in determining fertilizer response; greater accumulation of organic residues. slower growth under shade, and longer periods of nutrient uptake probably also contribute to the relatively smaller fertilizer response of the perennial shade systems and home gardens. Considerable knowledge gaps exist regarding the breakdown of organic residues, and interactions between mineral and organic amendments. Systems based on annual crops (e.g., alley cropping) are likely to be less nutrient-efficient and sustainable than systems based on perennial crops, due to reduced fixation and transfer of N to the crops, the tendency ot' the trees to compete for and sequester nutrients, relatively high P requirements of the crops, and the high labor cost of tree management. The possible benefits of fertilization of specific components in home gardens, and relative advantages of including low-value tree legumes, high-value shade trees, and fertilization in shaded perennial systems are only beginning to receive research attention.
引用
收藏
页码:157 / 176
页数:20
相关论文
共 81 条
[11]  
Beer J., Bonnemann A., Chavez W., Fassbender H.W., Imbach A.C., Martel I., Modelling agroforestry systems of cacao (Theobroma cacao) with laurel (Cordia alliodora) and poro (Erythrina poeppigiana). V. Productivity indices, organic material models and sustainability over ten years, Agroforestry Systems, 12, pp. 229-249, (1990)
[12]  
Binkley D., Forest Nutrition Management, (1988)
[13]  
Budelman A., The decomposition of the leaf mulches of Leucaena leucocephala, Gliricidia sepium, and Flemingia macrophylla under humid tropical conditions, Agroforestry Systems, 7, pp. 33-46, (1988)
[14]  
Budelman A., Nutrient composition of the leaf biomass of three selected woody leguminous species, Agroforestry Systems, 8, pp. 39-51, (1989)
[15]  
Budowski G., Kass D.C.L., Russo R., Leguminous trees for shade, Pesquisa Agropecuaria Brasileira, 19, pp. 205-222, (1984)
[16]  
Efecto de la fertilización en la producción de caf con y sin sombrea de Erythrina poeppigiana, Proyecto arboles fijadores de N: Leucaena — Calliandra, pp. 69-77, (1992)
[17]  
De Geus J.G., Fertilizer Guide for the Tropics and Subtropics, (1973)
[18]  
De Lucena-Costa N., Paulino V.T., Potassium fertilization affects Cajanus cajan growth, mineral composition, and nodulation, Nitrogen Fixing Tree Res Rep, 10, pp. 121-22, (1992)
[19]  
De Lucena-Costa N., Paulino V.T., Veasey E.A., Phosphorus fertilization affects Cajanus cajan growth, mineral composition, and nodulation, Nitrogen Fixing Tree Res Rep, 10, pp. 127-128, (1992)
[20]  
Doran J.W., Smith, Organic matter management and utilization of soil and fertilizer nutrients, Soil Fertility and Organic Matter as Critical Components of Productions Systems, pp. 53-72, (1987)