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Registro completo
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Biblioteca (s) : |
INIA Las Brujas. |
Fecha : |
20/03/2024 |
Actualizado : |
18/04/2024 |
Tipo de producción científica : |
Artículos en Revistas Indexadas Internacionales |
Autor : |
SCARLATO, M.; RIEPPI, M.; ALLIAUME, F.; ILLARZE, G.; BAJSA, N.; BERTONI, P.; BIANCHI, F.J.J.A.; ECHEVERRIBORDA, G.; GALVÁN, G.; GARCÍA DE SOUZA, M.; GILSANZ, J.C.; GONZÁLEZ BARRIOS, P.; DIESTE, J.P.; TRASANTE, T.; ROSSING, W.A.H.; DOGLIOTTI, S. |
Afiliación : |
MARIANA SCARLATO GARCIA, Faculty of Agronomy, Universidad de la República del Uruguay, Av. Garzón 780, Montevideo 11200, Uruguay; Farming Systems Ecology, Wageningen University and Research, PO Box 430, Wageningen 6700 AK, the Netherlands; M. RIEPPI, Faculty of Agronomy, Universidad de la República del Uruguay, Av. Garzón 780, Montevideo 11200, Uruguay; F. ALLIAUME, Faculty of Agronomy, Universidad de la República del Uruguay, Av. Garzón 780, Montevideo 11200, Uruguay; G. ILLARZE, Faculty of Agronomy, Universidad de la República del Uruguay, Av. Garzón 780, Montevideo 11200, Uruguay; N. BAJSA, Instituto de Investigaciones Biológicas Clemente Estable, Av. Italia 3318, Montevideo 11600, Uruguay; P. BERTONI, Faculty of Agronomy, Universidad de la República del Uruguay, Av. Garzón 780, Montevideo 11200, Uruguay; F.J.J.A BIANCHI, Farming Systems Ecology, Wageningen University and Research, PO Box 430, Wageningen 6700 AK, the Netherlands; G. ECHEVERRIBORDA, Cooperativa Entrebichitos, Uruguay,Camino Juan Carlos Boccone, San Jacinto, Canelones 91600, Uruguay; GUILLERMO GALVÁN, Faculty of Agronomy, Universidad de la República del Uruguay, Av. Garzón 780, Montevideo 11200, Uruguay; M. GARCÍA DE SOUZA, Faculty of Agronomy, Universidad de la República del Uruguay, Av. Garzón 780, Montevideo 11200, Uruguay; JUAN CARLOS GILSANZ MARTINEZ, INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria), Uruguay; P. GONZÁLEZ BARRIOS, Faculty of Agronomy, Universidad de la República del Uruguay, Av. Garzón 780, Montevideo 11200, Uruguay; J.P. DIESTE, Faculty of Agronomy, Universidad de la República del Uruguay, Av. Garzón 780, Montevideo 11200, Uruguay; T. TRASANTE, Instituto de Investigaciones Biológicas Clemente Estable, Av. Italia 3318, Montevideo 11600, Uruguay; W.A.H. ROSSING, Farming Systems Ecology, Wageningen University and Research, PO Box 430, Wageningen 6700 AK, the Netherlands; SANTIAGO DOGLIOTTI, Faculty of Agronomy, Universidad de la República del Uruguay, Av. Garzón 780, Montevideo 11200, Uruguay. |
Título : |
Towards the development of cover crop - reduced tillage systems without herbicides and synthetic fertilizers in onion cultivation: Promising but challenges remain. |
Fecha de publicación : |
2024 |
Fuente / Imprenta : |
Soil and Tillage Research. 2024, Volume 240, Article 106061. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.still.2024.106061 --- OPEN ACCESS. |
ISSN : |
0167-1987 |
DOI : |
10.1016/j.still.2024.106061 |
Idioma : |
Inglés |
Notas : |
Article history: Received 8 May 2023, Revised 15 February 2024, Accepted 20 February 2024, Available online 6 March 2024, Version of Record 6 March 2024. -- Correspondence: Scarlato, M.; Facultad de Agronomía, Universidad de la República, Camino Folle km 35.500, CP, Canelones, Progreso, Uruguay; email:mscarlato@fagro.edu.uy -- Document type: Article, Hybrid Gold Open Access. -- Funding: This work was supported by the National Research and Innovation Agency of Uruguay (grant no. POS_EXT_2016_1_134356 and project no. FMV_3_2018_1_148038 ), the National Institute of Agricultural Research of Uruguay , and the HortEco project funded by NWO-WOTRO (contract no. W 08.250.304 ). -- Supplementary material: https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S016719872400062X-mmc1.docx |
Contenido : |
ABSTRACT.- Cover crops with reduced tillage technology (CC-RT) can foster soil health and functioning, a crucial agroecological principle in any transition strategy to more sustainable agricultural systems. However, CC-RT commonly strongly relies on herbicides and synthetic fertilizers, and vegetable crop yields are variable and often low. We assessed the effects of two tillage systems (RT and conventional tillage) and the application of native effective microorganisms (NEM) on onion crop growth and development, yield, N-status, weed pressure, and soil physico-chemical and biological quality after a summer CC, without using herbicides or synthetic fertilizers. Using a participatory research strategy, we conducted a two-year experiment at an experimental station and a one-year trial on two commercial farms. Onion yields were generally low (between 10 and 16 Mg ha-1) and lower in 2019 than in 2020, and lower in RT than in CT in 2020. The relatively low yields in 2019 and RT were associated with poor crop growth and development and leaf-N concentrations below the critical threshold in the early stages of crop development. Soil bulk density was not limiting crop growth in any treatment. Soil mineral N was lower in 2019 than in 2020 and did not significantly differ between treatments. Soil biological activity was higher in RT than in CT. Although the CC residue soil cover in the early stages of the onion crop in RT was more than 50%, RT had a higher weed pressure than CT, which was reversed later in the growing season. The NEM application did not significantly affect most crop, weed, and soil variables. In conclusion, a reduced tillage system for onions without herbicides and synthetic fertilizers is within reach. However, further research is needed to manage weeds and soil N supply dynamics to make CC-RT feasible for no or low agrochemical input systems. © 2024 The Authors MenosABSTRACT.- Cover crops with reduced tillage technology (CC-RT) can foster soil health and functioning, a crucial agroecological principle in any transition strategy to more sustainable agricultural systems. However, CC-RT commonly strongly relies on herbicides and synthetic fertilizers, and vegetable crop yields are variable and often low. We assessed the effects of two tillage systems (RT and conventional tillage) and the application of native effective microorganisms (NEM) on onion crop growth and development, yield, N-status, weed pressure, and soil physico-chemical and biological quality after a summer CC, without using herbicides or synthetic fertilizers. Using a participatory research strategy, we conducted a two-year experiment at an experimental station and a one-year trial on two commercial farms. Onion yields were generally low (between 10 and 16 Mg ha-1) and lower in 2019 than in 2020, and lower in RT than in CT in 2020. The relatively low yields in 2019 and RT were associated with poor crop growth and development and leaf-N concentrations below the critical threshold in the early stages of crop development. Soil bulk density was not limiting crop growth in any treatment. Soil mineral N was lower in 2019 than in 2020 and did not significantly differ between treatments. Soil biological activity was higher in RT than in CT. Although the CC residue soil cover in the early stages of the onion crop in RT was more than 50%, RT had a higher weed pressure than CT, which w... Presentar Todo |
Palabras claves : |
Agroecology; Conservation agriculture; Farms; Nitrogen; Participatory research; Weeds. |
Asunto categoría : |
F01 Cultivo |
URL : |
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S016719872400062X/pdf
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Marc : |
LEADER 03943naa a2200409 a 4500 001 1064504 005 2024-04-18 008 2024 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d 022 $a0167-1987 024 7 $a10.1016/j.still.2024.106061$2DOI 100 1 $aSCARLATO, M. 245 $aTowards the development of cover crop - reduced tillage systems without herbicides and synthetic fertilizers in onion cultivation$bPromising but challenges remain.$h[electronic resource] 260 $c2024 500 $aArticle history: Received 8 May 2023, Revised 15 February 2024, Accepted 20 February 2024, Available online 6 March 2024, Version of Record 6 March 2024. -- Correspondence: Scarlato, M.; Facultad de Agronomía, Universidad de la República, Camino Folle km 35.500, CP, Canelones, Progreso, Uruguay; email:mscarlato@fagro.edu.uy -- Document type: Article, Hybrid Gold Open Access. -- Funding: This work was supported by the National Research and Innovation Agency of Uruguay (grant no. POS_EXT_2016_1_134356 and project no. FMV_3_2018_1_148038 ), the National Institute of Agricultural Research of Uruguay , and the HortEco project funded by NWO-WOTRO (contract no. W 08.250.304 ). -- Supplementary material: https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S016719872400062X-mmc1.docx 520 $aABSTRACT.- Cover crops with reduced tillage technology (CC-RT) can foster soil health and functioning, a crucial agroecological principle in any transition strategy to more sustainable agricultural systems. However, CC-RT commonly strongly relies on herbicides and synthetic fertilizers, and vegetable crop yields are variable and often low. We assessed the effects of two tillage systems (RT and conventional tillage) and the application of native effective microorganisms (NEM) on onion crop growth and development, yield, N-status, weed pressure, and soil physico-chemical and biological quality after a summer CC, without using herbicides or synthetic fertilizers. Using a participatory research strategy, we conducted a two-year experiment at an experimental station and a one-year trial on two commercial farms. Onion yields were generally low (between 10 and 16 Mg ha-1) and lower in 2019 than in 2020, and lower in RT than in CT in 2020. The relatively low yields in 2019 and RT were associated with poor crop growth and development and leaf-N concentrations below the critical threshold in the early stages of crop development. Soil bulk density was not limiting crop growth in any treatment. Soil mineral N was lower in 2019 than in 2020 and did not significantly differ between treatments. Soil biological activity was higher in RT than in CT. Although the CC residue soil cover in the early stages of the onion crop in RT was more than 50%, RT had a higher weed pressure than CT, which was reversed later in the growing season. The NEM application did not significantly affect most crop, weed, and soil variables. In conclusion, a reduced tillage system for onions without herbicides and synthetic fertilizers is within reach. However, further research is needed to manage weeds and soil N supply dynamics to make CC-RT feasible for no or low agrochemical input systems. © 2024 The Authors 653 $aAgroecology 653 $aConservation agriculture 653 $aFarms 653 $aNitrogen 653 $aParticipatory research 653 $aWeeds 700 1 $aRIEPPI, M. 700 1 $aALLIAUME, F. 700 1 $aILLARZE, G. 700 1 $aBAJSA, N. 700 1 $aBERTONI, P. 700 1 $aBIANCHI, F.J.J.A. 700 1 $aECHEVERRIBORDA, G. 700 1 $aGALVÁN, G. 700 1 $aGARCÍA DE SOUZA, M. 700 1 $aGILSANZ, J.C. 700 1 $aGONZÁLEZ BARRIOS, P. 700 1 $aDIESTE, J.P. 700 1 $aTRASANTE, T. 700 1 $aROSSING, W.A.H. 700 1 $aDOGLIOTTI, S. 773 $tSoil and Tillage Research. 2024, Volume 240, Article 106061. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.still.2024.106061 --- OPEN ACCESS.
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Registro original : |
INIA Las Brujas (LB) |
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Biblioteca (s) : |
INIA Tacuarembó. |
Fecha actual : |
04/04/2016 |
Actualizado : |
04/04/2016 |
Tipo de producción científica : |
Trabajos en Congresos/Conferencias |
Autor : |
GLISON, N.; GONZÁLEZ BARRIOS, P.; CORREA, E.; VIEGA, L.; SALDANHA, S.; REYNO, R.; MUSACCHIO, E.; RUSH, P.; SCHRAUF, G.; SPERANZA, P. |
Afiliación : |
UNIVERSIDAD DE LA REPÚBLICA (UDELAR)/ FACULTAD DE AGRONOMÍA; UNIVERSIDAD DE LA REPÚBLICA (UDELAR)/ FACULTAD DE AGRONOMÍA; UNIVERSIDAD DE LA REPÚBLICA (UDELAR)/ FACULTAD DE AGRONOMÍA; UNIVERSIDAD DE LA REPÚBLICA (UDELAR)/ FACULTAD DE AGRONOMÍA; Universidad de la República (UdelaR)/ Facultad de Agronomía - Regional Norte (Salto); RAFAEL ALEJANDRO REYNO PODESTA, INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria), Uruguay; FACULTAD DE AGRONOMÍA, UNIVERSIDAD DE BUENOS AIRES.; FACULTAD DE AGRONOMÍA, UNIVERSIDAD DE BUENOS AIRES.; FACULTAD DE AGRONOMÍA, UNIVERSIDAD DE BUENOS AIRES.; UNIVERSIDAD DE LA REPÚBLICA (UDELAR)/ FACULTAD DE AGRONOMÍA. |
Título : |
Responses of seedling emergence of three Paspalum species to environmental factors. |
Fecha de publicación : |
2015 |
Fuente / Imprenta : |
In: International Symposium of Forage Breeding (5., Buenos Aires, AR), 19-21 Octubre, 2015. Abstract. |
Idioma : |
Inglés |
Contenido : |
In the warm?temperate regions of Uruguay and Argentina, the adoption of warm?season perennial grasses has been very limited. Slow and unpredictable establishment has been perceived as one of the most limiting factors for their use either as pure stands or in mixtures with cool season grasses. Among the best studied species are P. dilatatum and related species and P. notatum. In this study we analyzed a network of locations and sowing dates to understand the responses of these species to environmental factors and determine appropriate sowing dates. We evaluated a single clone or inbred line of P. dilatatum cv. Chirú, P. dilatatum ssp. flavescens, P. urvillei and P. notatum. Trials were established for two years in Montevideo, Salto and Tacuarembó in Uruguay and Buenos Aires in Argentina. In each location plots of three lines of 1.2 m were arranged in a split?split plot design with three replicates. Genotypes were randomized within dates within irrigated or non?irrigated main plots. Sowing dates were classified as early and late fall and spring (March, April, September and November, respectively). Based on the initial number of viable seeds, proportions of established plants were recorded 30 days after sowing. The ranking of the four genotypes was stable across environments (Chirú > Flavescens > Notatum > Urvillei) and the effect of irrigation was also significant on all of them. In non?irrigated plots emergence was mostly positively associated with cumulative rainfall and negatively associated to mean temperature. On irrigated plots on the other hand, rainfall did not show any effect and the response to mean temperature was best described by a bilinear function which reached its maximum at approximately 20ºC. These results suggest that this set of species may exhibit secondary dormancy at higher mean temperatures. A weak association between establishment and thermal amplitude was found for most genotypes, especially P. urvillei. In general early sowing dates showed the higher establishment ratios both for the fall and the spring. A better adjustment of sowing dates and selection for low?dormancy genotypes like Chirú, may facilitate the adoption of Paspalum species in this region. MenosIn the warm?temperate regions of Uruguay and Argentina, the adoption of warm?season perennial grasses has been very limited. Slow and unpredictable establishment has been perceived as one of the most limiting factors for their use either as pure stands or in mixtures with cool season grasses. Among the best studied species are P. dilatatum and related species and P. notatum. In this study we analyzed a network of locations and sowing dates to understand the responses of these species to environmental factors and determine appropriate sowing dates. We evaluated a single clone or inbred line of P. dilatatum cv. Chirú, P. dilatatum ssp. flavescens, P. urvillei and P. notatum. Trials were established for two years in Montevideo, Salto and Tacuarembó in Uruguay and Buenos Aires in Argentina. In each location plots of three lines of 1.2 m were arranged in a split?split plot design with three replicates. Genotypes were randomized within dates within irrigated or non?irrigated main plots. Sowing dates were classified as early and late fall and spring (March, April, September and November, respectively). Based on the initial number of viable seeds, proportions of established plants were recorded 30 days after sowing. The ranking of the four genotypes was stable across environments (Chirú > Flavescens > Notatum > Urvillei) and the effect of irrigation was also significant on all of them. In non?irrigated plots emergence was mostly positively associated with cumulative rainfall and neg... Presentar Todo |
Thesagro : |
ARGENTINA; PASPALUM; PASTURAS; SIEMBRA; URUGUAY. |
Asunto categoría : |
-- |
URL : |
http://www.ainfo.inia.uy/digital/bitstream/item/5609/1/Symposium-REYNO-2015-BS-AS.pdf
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Marc : |
LEADER 03017nam a2200277 a 4500 001 1054583 005 2016-04-04 008 2015 bl uuuu u01u1 u #d 100 1 $aGLISON, N. 245 $aResponses of seedling emergence of three Paspalum species to environmental factors.$h[electronic resource] 260 $aIn: International Symposium of Forage Breeding (5., Buenos Aires, AR), 19-21 Octubre, 2015. Abstract.$c2015 520 $aIn the warm?temperate regions of Uruguay and Argentina, the adoption of warm?season perennial grasses has been very limited. Slow and unpredictable establishment has been perceived as one of the most limiting factors for their use either as pure stands or in mixtures with cool season grasses. Among the best studied species are P. dilatatum and related species and P. notatum. In this study we analyzed a network of locations and sowing dates to understand the responses of these species to environmental factors and determine appropriate sowing dates. We evaluated a single clone or inbred line of P. dilatatum cv. Chirú, P. dilatatum ssp. flavescens, P. urvillei and P. notatum. Trials were established for two years in Montevideo, Salto and Tacuarembó in Uruguay and Buenos Aires in Argentina. In each location plots of three lines of 1.2 m were arranged in a split?split plot design with three replicates. Genotypes were randomized within dates within irrigated or non?irrigated main plots. Sowing dates were classified as early and late fall and spring (March, April, September and November, respectively). Based on the initial number of viable seeds, proportions of established plants were recorded 30 days after sowing. The ranking of the four genotypes was stable across environments (Chirú > Flavescens > Notatum > Urvillei) and the effect of irrigation was also significant on all of them. In non?irrigated plots emergence was mostly positively associated with cumulative rainfall and negatively associated to mean temperature. On irrigated plots on the other hand, rainfall did not show any effect and the response to mean temperature was best described by a bilinear function which reached its maximum at approximately 20ºC. These results suggest that this set of species may exhibit secondary dormancy at higher mean temperatures. A weak association between establishment and thermal amplitude was found for most genotypes, especially P. urvillei. In general early sowing dates showed the higher establishment ratios both for the fall and the spring. A better adjustment of sowing dates and selection for low?dormancy genotypes like Chirú, may facilitate the adoption of Paspalum species in this region. 650 $aARGENTINA 650 $aPASPALUM 650 $aPASTURAS 650 $aSIEMBRA 650 $aURUGUAY 700 1 $aGONZÁLEZ BARRIOS, P. 700 1 $aCORREA, E. 700 1 $aVIEGA, L. 700 1 $aSALDANHA, S. 700 1 $aREYNO, R. 700 1 $aMUSACCHIO, E. 700 1 $aRUSH, P. 700 1 $aSCHRAUF, G. 700 1 $aSPERANZA, P.
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