Abstract
The economic and environmental performances of agriculture intercropping depend on the complementarities between the crops that make up the system. The objective of this work was to analyze the citrus-based intercropping systems in the Coastal Tablelands region of Northeastern Brazil, aiming to identify the associations of crops with better economic and environmental performances. The study started with the construction of a set of integrated indicators, with which the field information was recorded and the performance indices calculated, based on three principles: Profitability, Productive Efficiency, and Biological Regulation. Citrus orchards in monoculture resulted in lower environmental economic performance indices. The intercropping systems that yielded the best environmental and economic performance indices in the citrus orchards were: cassava; cassava, corn and beans; corn and pumpkin. The indicators associated with these economic-environmental performances were profit, seasonality, productive diversity, profit evenness, plant health control impact level, and efficiency in the use of water, nitrogen, and phosphate.
Index terms
fruticulture; citriculture; sustainability assessment; Coastal Tablelands; smallholding growers
Resumo
O desempenho econômico e ambiental do consórcio agrícola depende das complementaridades entre as culturas que compõem o sistema. O objetivo deste trabalho foi analisar os sistemas de consorciação à base de citros na região dos Tabuleiros Costeiros do Nordeste do Brasil, visando a identificar as consorciações de culturas com melhores desempenhos econômico e ambiental. O estudo iniciou-se com a construção de um conjunto de indicadores integrados, com os quais foram registradas as informações de campo e calculados os índices de desempenho, com base em três princípios: Rentabilidade, Eficiência Produtiva e Regulação Biológica. Os pomares de citros em monocultivo resultaram em menores índices de desempenho econômico ambiental. As combinações de cultivos consorciados aos citros que promoveram os melhores índices de desempenho econômico ambiental foram: mandioca; mandioca, milho e feijão; milho e abóbora. Os principais indicadores associados a este desempenho econômico ambiental foram o nível de impacto do controle fitossanitário, a diversidade produtiva, a lucratividade do consórcio, o equilíbrio da rentabilidade, o retorno do investimento em energia fóssil, e a eficiência do uso de água, de nitrogênio e de fósforo.
Termos para indexação
fruticultura; citricultura; avaliação da sustentabilidade; planaltos costeiros; pequenos agricultores
Introduction
Citrus fruits are among the most consumed in the world, either in the form of fresh fruit or juice. In Brazil, 18 million tons of oranges are harvested annually, representing 35% of global fruit production and 56% of the world’s orange juice (CURTOLO et al., 2017 CURTOLO, M.; CRISTOFANI-YALY, M.; GAZAFFI, R.; TAKITA, M.A.; FIGUEIRA, A.; MACHADO, M.A. QTL mapping for fruit quality in Citrus using DArTseq markers. BMC Genomics, Londres, v.18, n.1, p.289, 2017. ), accounting for approximately 73% of the international market (FAS-USDA, 2019 FEEDIPEDIA: Animal feed resources information system. INRA/CIRAD/AF/FAO, 2019. Disponível em: http://www.feedipedia.org/.Acesso em: 07 Jul. 2019.
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). The Northeast region of the country accounts for approximately 10% of the national citrus production, making it the second largest producing region after the Brazilian citrus belt in the Southeast (NEVES et al., 2011 NEVES, M.F.; TROMBIN, V.G.; LOPES, F.F.; KALAKI, R.; MILAN, P. Brazil’s citrus belt (São Paulo and Triângulo Mineiro). In: NEVES, M.F; TROMBIN, V.G.; LOPES, F.F.; KALAKI, R.; MILAN, P.(ed.). The orange juice business. Wageningen: Academic Publishers, 2011.176 p. ). With 142,826 hectares of orchards and producing 1,948,043 tons of fruits, with an average yield of approximately 13.3 t.ha-1 (IBGE, 2018 IBGE – Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística. SIDRA banco de tabelas estatísticas. Rio Grande do Sul: IBGE, 2018. Disponível em: htttp:www.sidra.ibge.gov.br/bda/pesquisa. Acesso em: 10 Jun. 2020.
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), the region stands as the seventh largest orange producer in the world.
In striking contrast with the intensive monoculture plantations of the main producing regions in the country’s Southeast, the citrus orchards of Northeastern Brazil are usually grown amid coconut plantations, seasonal maize crops and extensive pastures along the zone known as Coastal Tablelands (CARVALHO et al., 2020 CARVALHO, H.W.L. de; TEODORO, A.V.; BARROS, I.; CARVALHO, L.M. de; SOARES FILHO, W.S.; GIRARDI, E.A.; PASSOS, O.S.; PINTO-ZEVALLOS, D.M. Rootstock-related improved performance of ‘Pera’ sweet orange under rainfed conditions of Northeast Brazil. Scientia Horticulturae, Wageningen, v.263, p.109-148, 2020. ; MELO FILHO et al., 2009 MELO FILHO, J.F.; CARVALHO, L.L.; SILVEIRA, D.C.; SACRAMENTO, J.A.A.S.; SILVEIRA, E.C.P. Quality index in a cohesive yellow latosol cultivated with citrus. Revista Brasileira de Fruticultura, Jaboticabal, v.31, n.4, p.1168-1177, 2009. ). The orchards are planted mostly with orange cv. Pera (Citrus sinensis [L.] Osbeck) (CARVALHO et al., 2020 CARVALHO, H.W.L. de; TEODORO, A.V.; BARROS, I.; CARVALHO, L.M. de; SOARES FILHO, W.S.; GIRARDI, E.A.; PASSOS, O.S.; PINTO-ZEVALLOS, D.M. Rootstock-related improved performance of ‘Pera’ sweet orange under rainfed conditions of Northeast Brazil. Scientia Horticulturae, Wageningen, v.263, p.109-148, 2020. ; RODRIGUES et al., 2016 RODRIGUES, M.J.D.S.; OLIVEIRA, E.R.M.D.; GIRARDI, E.A.; LEDO, C.A.D.S.; SOARES FILHO, W.D.S. Citrus nursery tree production using different scion and rootstock combinations in screen house. Revista Brasileira de Fruticultura, Jaboticabal, v.38, n.1, p.187-201, 2016. ; TEODORO, 2020 TEODORO, A.V.; CARVALHO, H.W.L. de, BARROS, I.; CARVALHO, L.M. de; MARTINS, C.R.; SOARES FILHO, W.S.; GIRARDI, EDUARDO A.; PASSOS, ORLANDO, S. Performance of 'Jaffa' sweet orange on different rootstocks for orchards in the Brazilian Northeast. Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira, Brasília, DF, v.55, p.e01665, 2020. ) grafted on Rangpur lime (C. limonia Osbeck) (MARTINS et al. 2016 MARTINS, C.R.; CARVALHO, H.W.L.; TEODORO, A.V.; SOARES FILHO, W.S.; PASSOS, O.S. Agronomical performance of citrus scion cultivars grafted on Rangpur lime in north-eastern Brazil. Australian Journal of Crop Science, Lismore, v.10, n.1, p.16-23, 2016. ; MENESES et al., 2019 MENESES, T.N.; COELHO FILHO, M.A.; SANTOS FILHO, H.P.; SANTOS, L.L.A.; GESTEIRS, A.S.; SOARES FILHO, W.S.S.; PASSOS, O.S. Subsoiling and planting method on the initial growth of ‘pera’ sweet orange (Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbeck). Journal of Agricultural Science, Richmond Hill, v.11, n.9, p.1-10, 2019. ; CARVALHO et al., 2019 CARVALHO, L.M. de; CARVALHO, H.W.L.de; BARROS, I.; MARTINS, C.R.; SOARES FILHO, W.S.; GIRARDI, E.A.; PASSOS.O.S. New scion-rootstock combinations for diversification of sweet orange orchards in tropical hardsetting soils. Scientia Horticulturae, Wageningen, v.243, p.169-176, 2019. ; SANTANA et al. 2019 SANTANA, L.G.L.; SOUZA, E.S.; LEDO, C.A.S.; PASSOS, O.S.; COELHO FILHO, M.A.; GESTEIRA, A.S.; SOARES FILHO, W.S. Reaction to drought stress of citrus progenies with potential use for rootstocks development. Brazilian Journal of Botany, São Paulo, v.42, n.4, p.591-599, 2019. ), either as monocultures with production mostly directed to the juice processing industry, or as multi-species intercropping systems directed to the local fruit markets.
Such multi-species inter-cropping systems have been used as an alternative to traditional farming systems, with the potential to increase land productivity and diversify production (OUMA; JERUTO, 2010 OUMA, G.; JERUTO, P. Sustainable horticultural crop production through intercropping: the case of fruits and vegetable crops: A review. Agriculture and Biology Journal of North America, Colorado, v.1, n.5, p.1098-1105, 2010. ; DAI et al., 2017 DAI, X.; PU, L.; RAO, F. Assessing the Effect of a Crop-Tree Intercropping program on Smallholders’ incomes in rural Xinjiang, China. Sustainability, Basiléia, v.9, n.9, p.1542, 2017. ; PAUT et al., 2020 PAUT, R.; SABATIER, R.; TCHAMITCHIAN, M. Modelling crop diversification and association effects in agricultural systems. Agriculture, Ecosystems e Environment, Amsterdam, v.288, p.106711, 2020. ; ROSA-SCHLEICH et al., 2019) ROSA-SCHLEICH, J.; LOOS, J.; MUßHOFF, O.; TSCHARNTKE, T. Ecological-economic trade-offs of Diversified Farming Systems – A review. Ecological Economics, Amsterdam, v.160, p.251-263, 2019. , and favors greater biological balance, reducing problems with pests, diseases and weeds in the orchards, hence reducing the dependence on external inputs (DURU et al., 2015 DURU, M.; THEROND O.; MARTIN, G. How to implement biodiversity-based agriculture to enhance ecosystem services: A review. Agronomy for Sustainable Development, Paris, v.35, n.4, p.1259-1281, 2015. ; BELLOTE et al., 2013 BELLOTTE, J.A.M.; KUPPER, K.C.; RINALDO, D.; SOUZA, A. de; GOES, A. The effects of inter-crop cultivation between rows of citrus crop on spreading of Guignardia citricarpa ascospores and in the citrus black spot occurrence. Revista Brasileira de Fruticultura, Jaboticabal, v.35, n.1, p.102-111, 2013. ; GABA et al., 2015 GABA, S.; LESCOURRET, F.; BOUDSOCQ, S.; ENJALBERT, J.; HINSINGER, P.; JOURNET, E.P.; NAVAS, M.L.; WERY, J.; LOUARN, G.; MALÉZIEUX, E.; PELZER, E.; PRUDENT, M.; OZIER-LAFONTAINE, H. Multiple cropping systems as drivers for providing multiple ecosystem services: From concepts to design. Agronomy for Sustainable Development, Paris, v.35, n.2, p.607-623, 2015. ) while increasing farmers’ income (DAI et al., 2017 DAI, X.; PU, L.; RAO, F. Assessing the Effect of a Crop-Tree Intercropping program on Smallholders’ incomes in rural Xinjiang, China. Sustainability, Basiléia, v.9, n.9, p.1542, 2017. ).
Citrus intercropping systems have been studied in several countries, involving a diversity of forest species (COELHO, 2017 COELHO, G.C. Ecosystem services in Brazilian’s southern agroforestry systems. Tropical and Subtropical Agroecosystems, Yucatán, v.20, n.3, p.475-492, 2017. ; HARRISON AND HARRISON, 2016 HARRISON, S.; HARRISON, R. Priority tree species and potential agroforestry species mixtures for Fiji and Vanuatu. In: HARRISON, S.; KARIM, M.S. Promoting sustainable agriculture and agroforestry to replace unproductive land use in Fiji and Vanuatu. Camberra: Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR), 2016. 201p. ; MVONDO et al., 2019 MVONDO, A.E.; NDO, E.G.D., NGO BIENG, M.A.; ZACHÉE, A.; MANGA, B.; CILAS, C.; MANGA, M.L.T.; NOMO, L.B. Assessment of the interaction between the spatial organization of citrus trees populations in cocoa agroforests and Phytophthora foot rot disease of citrus severity. Agroforestry Systems, Berlim, v.93, n.2, p.493-502, 2019. ; PAULUS et al., 2019 PAULUS, D.; BECKER, D.; NAVA, G.A.; LUCKMANN, D.; MOURA, C. de A. Cultivation of mint (Mentha x gracilis) in intercropping with fruit trees in an agroforestry system: production and quality of essential oil. European Journal of Medicinal Plants, Exeter, v.30, n.1, p.1-9, 2019. ) and other fruit trees (OUMA AND JERUTO, 2010 OUMA, G.; JERUTO, P. Sustainable horticultural crop production through intercropping: the case of fruits and vegetable crops: A review. Agriculture and Biology Journal of North America, Colorado, v.1, n.5, p.1098-1105, 2010. ; ANDOMENSAH AND OFOSU-BUDU, 2012 ANDO-MENSAH, E.; OFOSU-BUDU, G.K. Evaluation of coconut-citrus intercropping systems in the context of lethal yellowing disease of coconut in Ghana. African Journal Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development, Nairobi, v.12, n.7, p.6945-6962, 2012. ; SINGHA et al., 2018 SINGHA, S.; UDDIN, M.S.; BANIK, S.; KASEM, M.A. Homestead agroforestry systems practiced at Kamalganj Upazila of Moulvibazar District in Bangladesh. Asian Journal of Research in Agriculture and Forestry, v.2, n.2, p.1-8, 2018. ; GILL et al., 2018 GILL, M.S.; KHEHRA, S.; GUPTA, N. Impact of intercropping on yield, fruit quality and economics of young Kinnow mandarin plants. Journal of Applied and Natural Science, New Delhi, v.10, n.3, p.954-957, 2018. ), as well as intercropping with vegetables (SINGH et al., 2018 SINGH, S.K.; SINGH, S.K.; SINGH, S. Vegetable crops as most efficient and economical intercrops: a brief review. Plant Archives, Punjab, v.18, n.1, p.923-929, 2018. ), cover crops and grain plants (MARTINELLI et al., 2017 MARTINELLI, R.; MONQUERO, P.; FONTANETTI, A.; CONCEIÇÃO, P.; AZEVEDO, F. Ecological mowing: an option for sustainable weed management in young citrus orchards. Weed Technology, Cambridge, v.31, n.2, p.260-268, 2017 ; MULINGE et al., 2018 MULINGE, J.M.; SAHA, H.M.; MOUNDE, L.Ç.; WASILWA, L.A. Effects of legume cover crops on orange (Citrus sinensis) fruit weight and brix. International Journal of Plant &Soil Science, Hooghly, v.21, n.4, p.1-9, 2018. ), grasses (BELLOTE et al., 2013 BELLOTTE, J.A.M.; KUPPER, K.C.; RINALDO, D.; SOUZA, A. de; GOES, A. The effects of inter-crop cultivation between rows of citrus crop on spreading of Guignardia citricarpa ascospores and in the citrus black spot occurrence. Revista Brasileira de Fruticultura, Jaboticabal, v.35, n.1, p.102-111, 2013. ) and legumes (SELIM et al., 2020 SELIM, M.; HEFNY, Y.; ABDEL-WAHAB, E.; MOHAMED, M. Interplanting some soybean cultivars with mandarin trees in sandy soil. Agricultural Sciences, Wuhan, v.11, n.1, p.88-110, 2020. ; LINARES et al., 2008 LINARES, J.; SCHOLBERG, J.; BOOTE, K.; CHASE, C.A; FERGUSON, J.J.; MCSORLEY, R. Use of the cover crop weed index to evaluate weed suppression by cover crops in organic citrus orchards. HortScience, College Park, v.43, n.1, p.27-34, 2008. ; DAI et al., 2019 DAI, J.; QIU, W.; WANG, N.; WANG, T.; NAKANISHI, H.; ZUO, Y. From leguminosae/gramineae intercropping systems to see benefits of intercropping on iron nutrition. Frontiers in Plant Science, Parkville, v.10, p.605, 2019. ). Although very valuable for providing management recommendations for these alternative cropping systems, these studies do not offer critical assessments of the differential performances of those varied crop associations, as compared to conventional monocrop citrus orchards; or quantitative bases for explaining and ranking the economic and environmental performances of those alternatives, as to facilitating technical decision on intercropping options and selection of appropriate indicators for such decisions.
Intercropping favors the conservation of agroecosystem functions which are compatible with the premises of sustainable intensification of agriculture (BARROS et al., 2016 BARROS, I.; MARTINS, C.R.; RODRIGUES, G.S.; TEODORO, A.V. Intensificação ecológica da agricultura. Aracaju: Embrapa Tabuleiros Costeiros, 2016. 31p. (Documentos, 208). ; GRIFFON, 2013 GRIFFON, M. Qu’est-ce que l’agriculture écologiquement intensive? Versailles: Editions Quae, 2013. 221p. (Collecton Matière à débattre e décider) ). The main interests in studying the interactions of agricultural processes in multi-species systems, in which production is maintained or increased, with maximization of biodiversity functionalities, include avoiding the expansion of cultivated areas, thus preventing greater losses of natural habitats (KLEIJN et al., 2019 KLEIJN, D.; BOMMARCO, R.; FIJEN, T.P.M.; GARIBALDI, L.A.; POTTS, S.G.; VAN DER PUTTEN, W.H. Ecological Intensification: bridging the gap between science and practice. Trends in Ecology e Evolution, Cambridge, v.34, n.2, p.154-166, 2019. ). These valuable sustainability objectives, such as increased yields and resilient agricultural systems, can be effectively achieved by redesigning cropping systems (PRETTY, 2018 PRETTY, J. Intensification for redesigned and sustainable agricultural systems. Science, Washington, v.362, n.6417,eaav0294, 2018. ).
On its turn, the economic and environmental performances of multi-species intercropping with fruit trees depend on both, the agronomic and the market complementarities of the combined crops (OUMA AND JERUTO, 2010 OUMA, G.; JERUTO, P. Sustainable horticultural crop production through intercropping: the case of fruits and vegetable crops: A review. Agriculture and Biology Journal of North America, Colorado, v.1, n.5, p.1098-1105, 2010. ). Lack of management information and knowledge about citrus intercropping may result in low yields and short shelf-life of the main crop.
Thus, the most appropriate multi-species combinations should be identified, in view of the complementary and supplementary relationships between citrus and intercropping species (GILL et al., 2018 GILL, M.S.; KHEHRA, S.; GUPTA, N. Impact of intercropping on yield, fruit quality and economics of young Kinnow mandarin plants. Journal of Applied and Natural Science, New Delhi, v.10, n.3, p.954-957, 2018. ).
In this context, the objective of this study is twofold: (1) to propose a set of integrated indicators for the assessment of the economic and environmental performances of citrus-based intercropping systems and (2) to present the results obtained in the field application of the proposed indicators system, corresponding to a group of reference citrus production farms in the Coastal Tablelands region in Brazil.
Material and methods
The present study was carried out in citrus farms in the Coastal Tablelands Landscape Unit of Southern Sergipe and Northern Bahia states, Brazil, encompassing the municipalities and involving the production areas shown in Table 1. The sampling plan strived to encompass a representation of 80% of citrus producers in the region, whose individual farms reach an area of less than 10 ha (MARTINS et al., 2020 MARTINS, C.R.; CARVALHO, H.W.L. de; TEODORO, A.V.; BARROS, I.; CARVALHO, L.M. de; SOARES FILHO, W. dos S.; PASSOS, O.S. Performance of the pineapple sweet orange on different rootstocks. Bioscience Journal, Uberlandia, v.36, n.2, p.458-472, 2020. ). In addition, it sought to include the main multi-species intercropping systems employed in the region, mostly characterized by short cycle secondary crops.
The main soils in this landscape unit are Yellow Ferralsols and Dystrophic yellow Acrisols (WRB/FAO), prone to exhibiting a marked hardsetting layer (<150 cm deep), acidic, Halic, with low cation exchange capacity (GOMES et al., 2017 GOMES, J.B.V.; ARAÚJO FILHO, J.C.; VIDAL-TORRADO, P.; COOPER, M.; SILVA, E.A.DA; CURI, N. Cemented Horizons and Hardpans in the Coastal Tablelands of Northeastern Brazil. Revista Brasileira de Ciência do Solo, Viçosa, MG, v.41, p.e0150453, 2017. ). The climate is As’ type in the Köppen-Geiger classification, i.e., tropical rainy with dry summer, with mean annual precipitation of 1,317mm (CARVALHO et al., 2019 CARVALHO, L.M. de; CARVALHO, H.W.L.de; BARROS, I.; MARTINS, C.R.; SOARES FILHO, W.S.; GIRARDI, E.A.; PASSOS.O.S. New scion-rootstock combinations for diversification of sweet orange orchards in tropical hardsetting soils. Scientia Horticulturae, Wageningen, v.243, p.169-176, 2019. ).
The field studies were carried out from July 2014 to October 2015, in 19 fruit farms whose main crop is citrus, with cropping combinations as presented in Table 2.
A system of economic and environmental performance indicators was built following the approach used by Rodrigues et al. (2009) RODRIGUES, G.S.; BARROS, I.; EHABE, E.E.; SAMA LANG, E.; ENJALRICK, F. Integrated indicators for performance assessment of traditional agroforestry systems in South West Cameroon. Agroforestry Systems, Berlim, v.77, n.1, p.9-22, 2009 for formulating the ‘Traditional Agroforestry Performance Indicators System’ (TAPIS). Aiming at improving farmers’ management capacity (essentially a biophysical efficiency attribute) and fostering sustainability of landholdings (essentially a socioeconomic adequacy attribute), a set of appropriate field measurements was listed and selected to produce coherent indicators, as advocated by several authors (BOCKSTALLER et al. 1997 BOCKSTALLER, C.; GIRARDIN, P.; VAN DER WERF, H.M.G. Use of agro-ecological indicators for the evaluation of farming systems. Reprinted from the European Journal of Agronomy, Amsterdam, v.7, n.1-3, p.261–270, 1997. ; BOSSHARD, 2000 BOSSHARD, A. A methodology and terminology of sustainability assessment and its perspectives for rural planning. Agriculture, Ecosystems e Environment, Amsterdam, v.77, n.1-2, p.29-41, 2000. ; GIRARDIN et al. 1999 GIRARDIN, P.; BOCKSTALLER, C.; VAN DER WERF, H.M.G. Indicators: tools to evaluate the environmental impacts of farming systems. Journal of Sustainable Agriculture, Binghamton, v.13, n.4, p.5-21, 1999. ; LEWANDOWSKI et al. 1999 LEWANDOWSKI, I.; HARDTLEIN, M.; KALTSCHMITT, M. Sustainable crop production: definition and methodological approach for assessing and implementing sustainability. Crop Science, Madison, v.39, n.1, p.184-193, 1999. ; RODRIGUES et al., 2010 RODRIGUES, G.S.; RODRIGUES, I.A.; BUSCHINELLI, C.C. de A.; BARROS, I. Integrated farm sustainability assessment for the environmental management of rural activities. Environmental Impact Assessment Review, Berlim, v.30, n.4, p.229-239, 2010. ).
These aforementioned objectives provided the basis for grading all selected field measurement variables according to improved or worsened performances, allowing the ranking of reference farms into normalized and aggregated indicators, as suggested by Andreoli and Tellarini (2000) ANDREOLI, M.; TELLARINI, V.Farm sustainability evaluation: methodology and practice. Agriculture, Ecosystems e Environment, Amsterdam, v.77, n.1-2, p.43-52, 2000. . This methodological approach aimed at providing farmers with useful information, regarding the economic and environmental performances of the corresponding crop combinations they used. The advantage of opting for normalization of data sets and indicators (instead of, for example, utility valuation or benchmarking) is the consistency obtained for the ranking baseline, and the meaning of the information conveyed by the indicators pertaining to the local reality (HARDI AND DESOUZA-HULETEY, 2000 HARDI, P.; DESOUZA-HULETEY, J.A. Issues in analyzing data and indicators for sustainable development. Ecological Modelling, Amsterdam, v.130, n.1-3, p.59-65, 2000. ).
Three main principles guided the plot performance ranking: profitability, production efficiency and biological regulation, and these principles were expressed through twelve indicators as follow:
I) Profitability – represented by the indicators: 1. Profit (Pr):
2. Profit evenness (PE):
3. Income seasonality (S):
Where: G is the Gini coefficient for income distribution (citrus plus intercrop species) along the year (monthly basis).
II) Production efficiency – represented by the indicators: 4. Area Equivalent Index (AEI):
5. Efficiency in the use of water (EW):
6. Efficiency in the use of N (EN):
7. Efficiency in the use of P (EP):
8. Efficiency in the use of K (EK):
9. Return on investment in fossil fuel energy (RIFFE):
10. Return on investment in labor (RIL):
III) Biological regulation – represented by the indicators: 11. Plant health control impact level (PHCIL):
Where: (Interventions)i is the number of phytosanitary interventions (for insect, disease and weed control) of toxicological class “i”; (Toxicity Factor)i is the weighting factor associated to interventions of toxicological class “i” being: i = 1 for manual/mechanical or biological intervention and (Toxicity factor)1 = 0.10;
i = 2 for interventions with Less toxic chemical products (Green: oral LD50 > 500 mg.kg-1 live weight) and (Toxicity factor)2 = 0.25;
i = 3 for interventions with Moderately toxic chemical products (Blue: 50 mg.kg-1 < oral LD50 < 500 mg.kg-1 live weight) and (Toxicity factor)3 = 0.33; i = 4 for interventions with Highly toxic chemical products (Yellow: 5 mg.kg-1 < oral LD50 < 50 mg.kg-1 live weight) and (Toxicity factor)4 = 0.50;
i = 5 for interventions with Extremely toxic chemical products (Red: oral LD50 < 5 mg.kg-1 live weight) and (Toxicity factor)5 = 1.00;
12. Productive diversity (PD):
Where:
Reference data and default values for all required coefficients in the above equations, for computation of each indicator, were assembled in a template spreadsheet, for automatic calculation and graphic expression of all estimations. This template spreadsheet (named ‘Indicator system for performance evaluation of citrus intercropping’) was formulated as to accommodate all field information for the 19 reference farms in the study, as well as new case studies that may be inserted in the database, facilitating the extension of the sample. The required default values and equation coefficients, for the variables in each crop, and respective source database or specific reference are shown in Table 3.
The field results of case studies carried out in the citrus orchards are presented in the ‘Indicator system for performance evaluation of citrus intercropping’ in graphs for each principle considered, allowing the verification of performance for the intercrop area in each indicator in a scale of zero to 1 (the closer to 1 the better the performance), normalized for the series of case studies included in the template, favoring the selection of management practices to maximize performance, according to farmer’s objectives. An aggregated environmental-economic performance index was also calculated as the average of the 12 indicators assessed for each studied reference farm.
A Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was also performed in order to identify the multiple correlations between all indicators and the distribution of the reference farms in the plane of the first two principal components. The results of the PCA are presented as a biplot showing the correlation circle of the indicators and the observation clouds (reference farms) in the plane of two most important principal components.
Results and discussion
The mean environmental-economic performance indices observed in the rural establishments studied, as defined by the 12 indicators assessed, ranged from 0.19 to 0.63, with an average of 0.45. Figure 1 shows the integrated environmental-economic performances of citrus production, both in monoculture (reference farms 1 and 2) and in multi-species intercropping areas, in the 19 case studies carried out in the region, and the individual results (normalized 0 – 1) of each indicator for all 19 farms are presented in Table 4.
Mean economic-environmental performance indices for the monoculture (cases 1 and 2) and multi-species intercropping systems based on citrus in the region of the Coastal Tablelands of Sergipe and Bahia states (Northeastern Brazil).
It can be observed that establishments dedicated to citrus monoculture presented significantly lower integrated economic-environmental performance indices (around 0.20), according to the mean values for the full set of 12 indicators. All the fruit farms with citrus intercropping showed higher performance indices, ranging from 0.35 to 0.63 with an average of 0.50. Seven rural establishments that developed citrus intercropping (37%) showed performance values above this average, especially among establishments that used citrus intercropped with corn, cowpea and cassava (producer 6) and cultivation of citrus intercropped with pumpkin and corn (producer 9), both with an environmental-economic performance index of 0.63. The higher performance indices were observed, almost exclusively, in the establishments that intercropped more than one crop into the citrus orchards, and these crops included cassava, maize, or both.
The main contrasts for determining this performance ranking were observed in the indicators of Profitability (mean = 0.59), followed by Production efficiency (mean= 0.53) and Biological regulation (mean = 0.37). The ‘heat map’ presented in Figure 2 shows that citrus monocultures performed lowest in all three principles, while all intercropping systems showed values at least equal to the mean, in at least one of these principles.
‘Heat map’ displaying the performance ranking of 19 citrus production farms, either in monoculture (1 and 2) or multispecies intercropping (3-19), according to 12 economic-environmental indicators, assessed in the Coastal Tablelands region of Northeastern Brazil.
Five clusters can be highlighted in the heatmap: - Cluster 1: Farms 2 and 1, citrus monocultures showing worse performance in all three principles; and 11 and 18 with poor performance in the three principles; - Cluster 2: Farms 10, 17, 13, 8, 5, above average performance in at least 1 principle; - Cluster 3: Farms 12, 3, 14, 19, 7, 16, close to average performance for all 3 principles; - Cluster 4: Farms 4, 15, above average in at least 2 principles (profitability and production efficiency); - Cluster 5: Farms 6, 9, high performance indices in all three principles.
The indices presenting the best mean performances across all case studies were seasonality (0.63), profit (0.62) and productive diversity (0.59), followed by profit evenness (0.53), plant health control impact level (0.49), efficiency in the use of water (0.44) and phosphate (0.42), return on investment in labor (0.42) and in fossil energy (0.40), area equivalence index (0.39), efficiency in the use of nitrogen (0.37) and potassium (0.15) (Figure 3).
Mean values for the indicator performance indices across the 19 case studies of monoculture and multi-species intercropping systems based on citrus in the region of the Coastal Tablelands of Sergipe and Bahia states (Brazil).
The best performance indices were observed, almost exclusively, in the establishments that intercropped more than one crop into the citrus orchards, and cassava or maize were one of these crops. Of the rural establishments with performance indices lower than the average, there are those that cultivated okra, common beans, pumpkin, papaya, and passion fruit. However, even being lower than average, the results demonstrate that the economicenvironmental performances of these intercropped systems were superior, as compared to citrus monocultures. It is important to point out that both establishments with citrus monoculture scored lower (index = 0.19) than those with the lowest economic-environmental performances for multi-species intercropping.
Regarding the principle of profitability, citrus monoculture establishments (1 and 2) presented the lowest profit and profit evenness indices. The profit of citrus multi-species intercropping resulted in indices ranging from 0.49 to 1.0 with a 0.69 average. The establishments above this average were those in which citrus was intercropped with papaya and watermelon (farm 3); citrus with maize, cowpea and cassava (farm 6); citrus with pumpkin and maize (farm 9); citrus with okra and yam (farm 10); citrus with okra and pumpkin (farm 17) and citrus with passion fruit and corn (farm 19). It is worth highlighting the establishment with the citrus intercropped with cassava, which presented the maximum profit index (farmer 8).
The profit evenness indices for the intercropped areas ranged from 0.13 to 1.0 with an average of 0.59.
The establishments with multi-species intercropping with above-average profit evenness were citrus with cassava (farm 5); citrus with maize, cowpea and cassava (farm 6); citrus with pumpkin and maize (farm 9); citrus with cowpea and pumpkin (farm 12); citrus with peanuts (farm 14); citrus with corn and cassava (farm 15); citrus with okra and pumpkin (farm 17). The best performer for this indicator was the establishment with citrus intercropped with passion fruit (farm 16).
Regarding the seasonality indicator, except for establishments with citrus monoculture, the indices ranged from 0.18 to 1.0 with a 0.66 average. Poorer performances were observed in citrus intercropping with maize, with a 0.29 score (farm 13), citrus with beans with a 0.18 index (farm 18), and citrus with peanuts with a 0.41 index (farm 14). The best performance for this indicator occurred again in the citrus with cassava intercrop, which presented the maximum score for the profit indicator (farmer 8). It should be emphasized that corn, beans, and peanuts are short-cycle crops (3 to 4 months) with prompt commercialization, that is, very seasonal. Cassava, on the other hand, is usually harvested over a long period, up to two years, according to the farmers’ needs.
With respect to the productive efficiency principle, as expected, establishments with citrus monoculture showed the lowest area equivalence index performances.
By contrast, in the other indicators such as water, N, P and K use efficiencies, as well as return on investment in fossil energy and in labor, mono-crop performance results remained close to or even higher than some of the multi-species intercrops. The area equivalence index for intercropping ranged from 0.21 to 1.0 with an average of 0.41. The establishments above this average were those with citrus intercrop with cassava, papaya and peanut (farm 4), citrus with cassava (farm 8), citrus with pumpkin and maize (farm 9), and citrus with cowpea and pumpkin (farm 12). Citrus intercropped with papaya and maize resulted in the best area equivalence index (farm 3) among the evaluated systems.
Regarding the water efficiency indicator (kg produce/m3), citrus monoculture systems scored 0.25 and 0.29, values higher than establishments with citrus intercropped with peanut (farm 14) and citrus with okra and pumpkin (farm 17). The water use efficiency indices ranged from 0.17 to 1.0 with an average of 0.50. There were nine establishments with performances above this value, i.e., citrus intercropped with papaya and watermelon (farm 3), citrus with cassava (farm 5), citrus with corn, cowpea and cassava (farm 6), citrus with fava and citrus with passion fruit and maize (farm 9), citrus with passion fruit (farm 16) and citrus with passion fruit and maize (farm 19). The best performance in water use efficiency among the citrus intercropping systems was the combination with cassava, papaya, and peanut (farm 4).
The efficiency in the use of N indices ranged from 0.14 to 1.0 with an average of 0.37. It is worth mentioning that the indicator of efficient use of nitrogen for citrus monocultures was superior to over 75% of the multispecies intercropping systems, being surpassed only by the establishments that cultivated citrus intercropped with maize (farm 6), with cowpea and cassava (farm 12), with cowpea and pumpkin (farm 14) and citrus intercropped with passion fruit (farm 16). In general, the efficiency in which nutrients applied are transformed into plant biomass depends on complex processes involving plant, environment, and fertilizer technology. There are also losses during crop development, that can reach more than 90% of the N applied, depending on cultural practices, soil and water (OLIVEIRA et al., 2015 OLIVEIRA, P.N. de; DOVIS,V.L.; MATTOS JUNIOR, D. de. Nitrogênio na cultura dos citros. Piracicaba: IPNI, 2015.p.6-14. (Informações Agronômicas, 163). ), and intercropping is considered a way to reduce N losses substantially (MANEVSKI et al., 2015 MANEVSKI, K.; BORGENSEN, C.D.; ANDERSEN, M.N., KRISTENSEN, I.S. Reduced nitrogen leaching by intercropping maize with red fescue on sandy soils in North Europe: a combined field and modeling study. Plant and Soil, Dordrecht, v.388, n.1-2, p.67-85, 2015 ).
The efficiency in the use of P indices ranged from 0.10 to 1.0 with an average of 0.45. Based on this indicator, eight multi-species combinations presented above-average indices, with the citrus with pumpkin and maize (farm 9) being the most efficient. Regarding the efficiency of the use of K, indices ranged from 0.10 to 1.0 with a mean of 0.16. Only four intercropping establishments had aboveaverage rates, especially the citrus with cassava and maize (farm 15). Potassium fertilization employed in these four consortia averaged 19.3 kg.ha-1, while in the others the average was close to 96 kg.ha-1, i.e., a volume 3 to 4-fold those observed in the most efficient K applications. The water content in the soil affects the contact of potassium with the roots, as well as its absorption. Generally, the absorption of potassium occurs by diffusion, however, in low extra-cellular concentrations, the absorption of potassium depends on energy (ATP) investment (TAIZ; ZEIGER, 2013 TAIZ, L.; ZEIGER, E. Fisiologia vegetal. 5.ed. Porto Alegre: Artemed, 2013. 954 p. ). Thus, the moisture content in the soils is determinant in the rate of absorption of potassium by the plants.
The analysis of return on investment in fossil energy used in production showed that citrus monoculture performances were lower than intercropped systems, with indices ranging from 0.15 to 1.0 with average of 0.43. Among these, only seven intercropping areas had above-average indices, with citrus intercropped with cassava, papaya, and peanuts (farm 4) scoring 0.9 and citrus with pumpkin and maize (farm 9) scoring 1.0. As for the return on investment in labor, indices ranged from 0.14 to 1.0 with a mean of 0.43. In this indicator only six establishments showed performances above average values, including citrus intercropping with maize (farm 13) and citrus with pumpkin and maize (farm 9), with indices of 0.98 and 1.0, respectively.
Regarding the principle of biological regulation, the indicator of plant health control impact level ranged from zero to 0.95 with a mean of 0.53. Eight aboveaverage establishments were found, with highlight for three intercropping systems with indices close to 1.0, i.e., 0.95 for the citrus with cassava (farm 5), 0.90 for citrus intercropping with maize, cowpea and cassava (farm 6) and 0.93 for the citrus with peanuts (farm 14).
As for the indicator of productive diversity, in the intercropping systems indices ranged from 0.22 to 1.0 with an average of 0.66. In this indicator nine establishments resulted in above-average indices, with citrus intercropped with maize, cowpea, and cassava scoring 0.96 (farm 6), citrus with okra and yam scoring 0.99 (farm 10), and the citrus with cassava, papaya, and peanut scoring 1.0 (farm 4).
Once all the principles and indicators have been considered, as to their general distributions along the gradient of citrus monoculture and intercropping systems, a question remains regarding their possible correlations, as well as about the plant combinations that may better explain the observed economic-environmental performances. In order to explore these aspects, a Principal Components Analysis (PCA) was carried out, combining the information on the five clusters derived from the general mean performances for the three principles (as shown in the heat map of Figure 2) and the 19 cropping systems studied. The PCA shows that there is a positive and significant correlation (R = 0.6724) between the principles Profitability and Biological regulation, and that both principles are associated with the F1 axis that accounts for ~60% of the variation. The Production efficiency principle does not correlate with the other two principles and is associated with the F2 axis, which accounts for ~30% of the variation (Figure 4).
Biplot of the Principal Component Analysis for citrus-based intercropping systems correlating different combinations of plant species and the performance indices for three economic-environmental principles: Profitability, Productive efficiency, and Biological regulation.
Regarding the crop combinations, it is not possible to identify any clear pattern of plant associations and performance in the considered principles, except that citrus intercropping presented better performance than monocultures, in the three principles considered. Most likely, the main performance differences between crop combinations were due to the diversity of orchard management strategies, as depicted by the set of indicators, rather than the specific crop combination, considering the universe of species observed in the study.
Conclusions
The economic and environmental performances of citrus monoculture resulted inferior to the multispecies intercropped systems in the Coastal Tablelands region. Citrus intercropping with cassava, corn, common bean, cowpea, yam, fava, pumpkin, okra, peanut, watermelon, papaya, and passion fruit bring economic and environmental benefits to the fruit producing farms.
Cultures intercropped with citrus that promoted the best environmental economic performance indices were cassava; cassava, corn, and beans; corn and pumpkin. The indicators associated with these economic-environmental performances were as follows, in decreasing importance order: (1) profit, (2) seasonality, (3) productive diversity, (4) profit evenness, (5) plant health control impact level, (6) efficiency in the use of water and (7) phosphate, (8) return on investment in labor and in (9) fossil energy, (10) area equivalence index, (11) efficiency in the use of nitrogen and (12) potassium.
Acknowledgements
We are thankful to all farmers and agricultural extensionists of EMDAGRO-SE who lent their time, knowledge, and experience in favor of this study. This research was funded by the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa). Project MP2 Nr. 02.12.01.013.00.00.
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Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
12 Feb 2021 -
Date of issue
2021
History
-
Received
06 July 2019 -
Accepted
01 Oct 2020