<b>The Peruvian carrot and lettuce yield and income in monocropping and intercropping systems, using nitrogen fertilization and chicken manure in cover</b> - DOI: 10.4025/actasciagron.v25i1.2672
Abstract
The aim of this paper was to evaluate the Amarela de Carandaí Peruvian carrot plants and the Grand rapids lettuce yield, in monocropping and intercropping system, using nitrogen fertilization (4.5 g m-2 of N, in urea form) and semi-decomposed chicken manure (10.0 t ha-1) as soil cover. Treatments were lettuce (A), Peruvian carrot (M), A - M, A - M - Nitrogen (N), A - M - semi-decomposed chicken manure (CF), A - M - N - CF, M - N, M-CF and M - N - CF arranged in a complete randomized block design in three replications. The lettuce harvests were done 81 days after the sowing and the Peruvian carrot ones occurred 235 days after. The highest fresh mass lettuce yield (9.88 t ha-1) was obtained in A-M-N treatment, which had a significant increase of 5.69 t ha-1 in relation to intercropped plants yield without N and CF. The fresh mass yields of commercial Peruvian carrot roots in monocropping system were superior to the intercropped one, except to M-A-N treatment. Dried mass yield of non-commercial amid compounds was also significantly higher for Peruvian carrot plants in monocropping system, with an increase of 59.02% in relation to the one obtained of M-A-CF treatment, which was the smallest. The equivalent ration areas varied from 1.01 in M-A treatment to 1.85 in M-A-N. The best income was yielded by the M-A intercropping using nitrogen fertilization.Downloads
Download data is not yet available.
Published
2008-04-23
How to Cite
Vieira, M. do C., Zárete, N. A. H., & Gomes, H. E. (2008). <b>The Peruvian carrot and lettuce yield and income in monocropping and intercropping systems, using nitrogen fertilization and chicken manure in cover</b> - DOI: 10.4025/actasciagron.v25i1.2672. Acta Scientiarum. Agronomy, 25(1), 201-208. https://doi.org/10.4025/actasciagron.v25i1.2672
Issue
Section
Agronomy
DECLARATION OF ORIGINALITY AND COPYRIGHTS
I Declare that current article is original and has not been submitted for publication, in part or in whole, to any other national or international journal.
The copyrights belong exclusively to the authors. Published content is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0) guidelines, which allows sharing (copy and distribution of the material in any medium or format) and adaptation (remix, transform, and build upon the material) for any purpose, even commercially, under the terms of attribution.
2.0
2019CiteScore
60th percentile
Powered by 
2.0
2019CiteScore
60th percentile
Powered by 