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Crop-Livestock Integration Benefits

Lourival Vilrla, Manuel Claudio Motta Macedo, Geraldo Bueno Martha Jnior and Joo Kluthcouski

From the publication Integra Lavoura-Pecuria


Joo Kluthcouski, Luis Fernando Stone and Homero Aidar (eds.)
Embrapa Arroz e Feijo
Santo Antnio de Gois, GO, 2003
Translated with the permission of Embrapa
Introduction

The development of alternatives for the reestablishment of the production capacity of cultivated pastures is
fundamental to achieve the sustainability and intensification of the pastoral activity in the Cerrado regions. Some of the
viable options suggested are the integration of the systems of grain and livestock production, together with direct
planting. These systems have the potential to increase production and reduce risks of degradation while improving the
soil chemical, physical and biological properties and the productive potential of grains as much as forage.

The innumerable benefits of the crop-livestock integration can be synthesized as: agronomic, through the recuperation
and maintenance of the soil productive capacity; economic, by means of product diversification and higher yields and
quality at less cost; ecological, through the reduction of crop pests and consequentially less pesticide use as well as
erosion control; and socially by more uniform income distribution as the livestock and crop activities separately
concentrate income generation. The higher generation of direct or indirect tributes as well as reduced urban migration
also need to be considered. The cost of the creation of a new job in rural areas is much less than in urban.

New benefits inherent to the crop-livestock integration are constantly being seen by researchers and farmers and some
of these are covered in more detail in this chapter.

Soil improvements, Productivity and Production System Economics

The complex of the advantages of the crop-livestock integration are still not totally qualified nor even quantified.
However, present knowledge indicates that this practice will surely be the basis of the sustainability of crop and
livestock production in the Cerrados. Most of the tropical forages are known for their adaptation and
tolerance/resistance to biotic factors that affect annual crops. In respect to soil treatment maintenance of forage crops
is the minimum possible. On the other hand, in the most varied annual crop production systems in the Cerrados biome,
the application of soil correction and mineral fertilizer in balanced quantities has been necessary to achieve good
harvests. In time, the continual use of these inputs improve/correct the soil chemical fertility. However, the intensively
mechanized production of annual crops can result in the physical soil degradation, such as compaction and de-
structuring as well as reduction of organic matter, even when using the traditional rotations. Also, a significant increase
in the number of biotic crop pest species can occur, with a consequential reduction in productivity and increased costs
of pesticide use.

The pastures, on the other hand, exhaust the residual crop nutrients but can recycle nutrients from deeper soil layers
thanks to their abundance and depth of the roots exploration. Concomitantly, pastures are optimal accumulators of
biomass both in and above the soil, practically during the whole period of non-climatic restrictions and for this reason
enrich the soil with organic matter. Beyond this, the main tropical forages, particularly the grasses, have not suffered
from many pest and disease attacks that are common in cultivated crops and thus break their cycle. Thus, one can say,
that in the integration of these activities there exists a natural exchange of benefits in the sense of recuperating lands
degraded by monocropping.

Chemical, Physical and Biological Soil Benefits

The soil organic material (SOM) is often considered as the soils font of life as it furnishes energy and nutrients for soil
organisms, which, in turn, stimulate important activities in the natural and agricultural ecosystems such as carbon (C)
and nutrient recycling. In the face of the limited use of soil correctives and fertilizers in the Cerrados region, it is easy
to perceive the great importance of the nutritional function of the SOM in these ecosystems.

In addition, the SOM executes other functions vital to the life cycle, such as, for example: a positive action on the
activity of soil flora and fauna that help in soil aggregation - favouring a better water infiltration into the soil profile and
reduced erosion and run off; the tying up of toxic types of aluminium and manganese through labile (volatile) C
composites; increase in the capacity of effective soil cationic exchange (CCE), especially in soils with a pH greater than
5,5 that determines the better storage and retention of nutrients; better soil water storage capacity; positive action on
the stability of soil aggregates, porosity and density; and contribution to decreased soil compaction. (Silva and Resck,
1997; Stevenson and Cole, 1999; Macedo, 2000; Craswell and Lefroy, 2001; Martius et al., 2001 and Palm et al.,
2001).

However, over years of crop cultivation, the loss of SOM is constant and consequently there is a compromise of the
physical, chemical and biological quality of the soil. (Vilela et al., 1999 and Martius et al., 2001). In the contrary, the
pastures, especially when well managed, have the capacity to maintain or even improve the level of soil organic matter
as opposed to annual crops.

Figure 1 shows that soybean monoculture over 13 years in a very clay red-yellow latosol in Cerrado vegetation reduced
the initial level of SOM of 3,6% by 24,4%. On the other hand, soil covered with Brachiaria humidicola, managed and
cut over 9 years, gave a continual increase in the SOM level that started to decrease when the system returned to
annual crops (soybean-maize rotation). However, one can see that, up to the last year, the soil covered with pasture
maintained a difference of 30% in relation to the annual crop rotation system (Sousa et al., 1997). Under pastoral
conditions with good management, the SOM increase through the same pasture can even be higher as understood by
the overview presented by Corsi et al. (2001).
Figure 1. The dynamics of soil organic matter from 0 to 20 cm depth in two crop rotation systems in a
clay-texture red-yellow latosol. Source: Sousa et al. (1997).

The positive soil chemical and physical effects of the pasture/crop rotation were evident from the work of Greenland
(1971) and White et al. (1978). In an overview on soil use systems with pastures and crops these authors discussed
the need to increase the use and efficiency of these systems for a better water and N use. Similarly, the work of Daz
Rosello (1992) showed a reduction of 2% in relation to C/N in a continuous crop sequence area, this was due to the
reduction of total N, mainly when legumes were not rotated. This supports the idea that pastures are more efficient
nutrient recyclers than crops (Greenland, 1971; White et al., 1978 and Vilela et al., 2002).

In fact, Greenland (1971) in a study on crop/pasture rotation, showed that the N stored over the years by the inclusion
of grass pastures had a direct and positive effect on wheat production when sown in succession.

Results favouring the P balance in areas of crop-pasture integration when compared to continuous agricultural systems
using fertilizer have also been observed (Moron and Kiehl, 1992). Souza et al. (1997) showed that the first soybean
crop productivity after nine years of pasture (rotation system pasture/crops), was superior to the annual crop system
(13th soybean crop) for the same level of soil P (Figure 2), showing the greater use efficiency of this nutrient. As an
example one sees that 6 mg dm-3 of soil P (Mehlich 1) were needed in order to produce 3t/ha of soybean in the annual
crop system while in the pasture/annual crop system the need was only 3 mg dm-3.

Figure 2. The effect of two crop rotation systems in the relation between available phosphorous (Mehlich
1) from 0 to 20 cm depth and the yield of the 13th soybean crop (cv Cristalina) in a clay-texture red-
yellow latosol.
Source: Sousa et al. (1997).
Source: Sousa et al. (1997).

The lower critical level of P in the pasture-soybean rotation could be a consequence of recycled P from SOM
mineralization accumulated during the pasture period and/or blockage of the P adsorption sites by greater SOM
accumulation, thus reducing P fixation (Fox and Searle, 1978). These results show the better use efficiency of P by
plants in an annual crop-pasture rotation than in an annual mono-cropping system.

It has also been seen that the pastures are more efficient in the use of soil P than the annual crops. Goedert et al.
(1986) showed that Bracharia humidicola was more efficient than soybean in the uptake of residual phosphorous
(Figure 3). These authors observed that, in seven years of cultivation, soybean extracted 12 kg/ha of P2O5, while that
two years of soybean followed by five years of pasture extracted about 50 kg/ha of P2O5 from the system.

Figure 3. Yields of soybean and Bracharia humidicola in response to the surface application of 100 kg/ha
of P2O5 in the form of single super-phosphate before soybean sowing in a clay-texture red-yellow latosol.
The values in (brackets) and [hard brackets] represent 100% for soybean and brachiaria (t/ha)
respectively. Source: Goedert et al. (1986).

According to Sousa et al. (1977), another way to evaluate P use efficiency is the soybean yield per unit of residual soil
P. Table 1 shows that this yield, in the annual crop-pasture system, was on average double that of the continuous
annual crop system. The results obtained by Sousa et al. (1997) show furthermore that, generally, the annual crop-
pasture system recuperated more P than the annual. On overage the annual crop-pasture system recuperated 61% of
applied P and the annual system 37%.

Table 1. Soybean production in the 13th year in response to residual P from single super-phosphate applications in the
systems annual crop-pasture and annual in a clay-texture red-yellow latosol.

P application Residual P 1 Soybean production

Spread Drilled Annual/pasture Annual Annual/pasture Annual


Kg/ha P2O5 Kg/ha

0 100 352 925 2 958 (9.1) 2 3 016 (3,2)

100 100 438 1 027 3 047 (7) 2 950 (2,9)


200 100 486 1 126 3 148 (6,5) 2 899 (2,6)

1 Total P applied subtracted from that exported through grain or dry matter harvests.
2 Values in brackets represent the grain production divided by the residual soil P.

Source: adapted from Sousa et al. (1997).

Table 2. Total amount of P exported from some treatments of P top-dressed in the first year of 17 years of cropping in
areas with the systems annual crop-pasture and annual in a clay-texture red-yellow latosol.

P applied P exported
Annual/pasture Annual
Kg/ha P2O5

100 69 (69) 1 38 (38)

200 134 (67) 75 (37)


400 227 (57) 136 (34)
400 227 (57) 136 (34)
800 411 (52) 294 (37)

1 Values in brackets express the relationship (%) between exported and applied P.

Source: adapted from Sousa et al. (1997).

Ayarza et al. (1993) showed positive results in the improvement of soil physical properties, such as the stability of
aggregates, in the system crop and livestock at the Santa Terezinha farm in Uberlandia, Minas Gerais. Pastures seeded
in sequence to crops rapidly increased aggregates stability, even superseding the natural vegetation, and proving the
important contribution of the extensive and deep root system of the grasses in the aggregation of soil particles. The
level of soil organic matter also evolved in the rotation, passing from 0,84-0,94% in the mono-cropped areas to 1,23%
in the crop/pasture sequence.

The integrated use of crop and pasture has also stimulated the interest of farmers seeking to diversify their production
systems and to overcome the problems arising from successive annual crops such insect pests, weeds and diseases. It
is known, for example, that the forage grasses are highly resistant to the majority of pests and diseases and thus can
break the cycle of damaging biotic agents, resulting in less use of pesticides (Kluthcouski et al., 2000 and Oliveira et
al., 2001).

In fact, Kluthcouski et al. (2000) indicated that the brachiaria straw has contributed immensely to the reduction in the
intensity of attack of some soil-borne diseases (white mould and root rots caused by Rhizoctonia solani and Fusarium
solani f. sp. phaseoli) in the black bean crop compared to straw residues of rice and particularly of soybean and maize.
Cobucci et al. (2001) further indicated that the crop-pasture was effective in reducing weed emergence in black beans
in the winter (Figure 4). According to the authors the break in the weed cycle lessened the incidence.

Figure 4. Weed population 15 days after black bean emergence in areas subjected to soybean mono-cropping and
soybean intercropped with Brachiaria brizantha cv Marandu or maize mono-cropping and maize intercropped with B.
brizantha cv Marandu. Source: Cobucci et al. (2001).

Another positive biological effect coming from the crop-pasture integration was observed by Vilela et al. (1999). They
suggested that the interruption of the annual crop cycle by the introduction of the consortium of Andropogon
gayanus/Stylosanthes guianensis cv Minero reduced the soil nematode population (Table 3).

Table 3. The effect of cultivation systems on nematode populations in a clay-texture red-yellow latosol.

Cultivation system Saprophytes Parasites Eggs


Individuals/ 50g of soil
Andropogon (Ag) 29,4 7,2 18,1 4,0 4,9 1,7
Ag + Minero 50,8 7,9 22,5 4,1 3,8 0,8

Annual crops 1 30,8 2,5 298,0 55,7 14,9 4,3

Annuals/Ag + Minero 2 21,7 3,0 30,3 3,9 5,2 0,7

Ag + Minero/annuals 3 25,9 3,5 14,1 1,7 3,5 0,4

Native Cerrado 49,5 21,2 26,3 2,8 2,7 0,6

1 The crop sequence was: soybean-soybean-maize-soya-maize-soya.


2 Pasture established after a cycle of annual crops (soybean-soybean-maize-soybean).
3 Annual crops (maize and soybean) a four year cycle of pasture.

Source: Vilela et al. (1999).

Apart from the beneficial effects of crop-pasture integration on pest and disease incidence, positive effects on root
association with arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi have been observed. These increase the plants capacity to absorb
soil nutrients, particularly P, improving the response to various fertilizers and correctives, thus benefiting production
(Miranda et al., 2001). In Table 4 it can be seen that the forages were more efficient in the quantitative population
increase of native AMs than soybeans at the time of establishment (first cultivation in 1992) of these crops. However,
from the second planting on, the perennial forages became less dependant on AMs and the AM sporulation and root
colonization was less and similar to that of the crops. Also, these attributes generally increased with time in the annual
crops.

A non-adequate crop sequence could result in a selective accumulation of AMs in the soil, which may be inefficient for
future plantings. Rotations with different crops would be needed to alter the qualitative composition of the AMs with a
view to re-establishing a new equilibrium between the fungal species that would be efficient for a greater number of
plant species.

Table 4. Population density of native arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in the soil, sampled at different times, in function of
the soil-use systems: NC = native Cerrados; Ag = Andropogon gayanus; Ag+leg = A. gayanus/Stylosanthes guianensis
cv Minero; Crops - S= soybean and M = Maize. (Averages of two replicates).

Sampling (Season) Year No of spores per 50g of soil Root colonization (%)

NC Ag Ag+leg Crops Ag Ag+leg Crops


Dry 1991 16 15 1 12 1 10 1
Rainy 1992 - 269 288 27 S 69 74 29 S 2
Dry " - 48 115 33 - - -
Rainy 1993 - 76 120 91 S 27 31 38 S 2
Dry " 26 49 52 63 28 19 -
Rainy 1994 38 57 73 61 M 51 60 83 M 2
Dry " 8 38 51 57 43 56 -
Rainy 1995 10 40 38 49 S 27 33 61 S 2
Dry " 4 29 36 54 40 36 -
Rainy 1996 2 28 34 60 M 51 50 84 M

1 Initially detected in the areas after removal of the native vegetation


2 Rest period

Source: Vilela et al. (1999).

In this manner, the quantitative alteration observed in Cerrados soil cultivated with forages and annuals (Table 4) was
accompanied by an alteration in the number of species when crop rotation was realized (Table 5). This rotation
occurred in the rainy season of 1995/1996 and when the areas with intercropped pasture were cultivated with maize
and, in the areas with annual crop, intercropped pastures were established (A. gayanus/S. guianensis cv Minero).
The introduction of annual crops in the area previously occupied by forages re-established the number of native AM
species, this was also found in the area cultivated with annual crops.

Table 5. Effect of cropping systems on the dynamics of species of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi present in a dark red
Cerrado latosol. Ag + legumes = Andropogon gayanus intercropped with a legume cocktail (Calopogonium mucunoides,
Stylothanthes guianensis cv Minero, centrosema and perennial soybean); Crop = 1994/95 - maize; 1995/96 -
soybean.

Systems Time of sampling


April/1994 September/1995 April/1996

Species of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi 1


Cerrado Asp.Lsp.Csp. Asp.Lsp.Csp. Asp.Lsp.Csp.
Andropogon (Ag) Asp.Lsp. Asp.Lsp. Asp.Lsp.
Ag + legumes Asp.Lsp. Asp.Lsp. Asp.Lsp.Csp.Gsp.Esp.
Annual crop Asp.Lsp.Csp.Gsp. Asp.Lsp.Csp.Gsp. Asp.Lsp.Csp.Gsp.Esp.
Pasture/annual crop Asp.Lsp. Asp.Lsp.Csp. Asp.Lsp.Csp.Gsp.Esp.
Annual crop/pasture Asp.Lsp.Csp.Gsp. Asp.Lsp.Csp.Gsp. Asp.Lsp.Csp.Gsp.Esp.

1 Asp. = Acaulospora sp.: A. scrobiculata, A. mellea, A. tuberculata; Csp. = Scutellospora sp.: S.

biornata, S. cerradensis, S. pellucida, S. reticulata; Lsp = Glomus sp.: G. occultum, G. clarum; Gsp. =
Gigaspora sp.: G. gigantea, G. margarita; Esp. = Entrophospora sp.: E.
colombiana.
Source: Vilela et al. (1999).

Benefits in the Productivity of Grain Crops and Forages

Ayarza et al. (1993) found that the yield of grains was positively correlated with the age of the pasture that preceded
the annual crops in rotation and that an increase of 127 kg of grain occurred for each year of pasture. However, in
some cases, the rotation with pastures did not show evident effects on maize and soybean grain yields (Figure 5). In
other cases the soybean yield was even reduced by 11 to 27% in relation to mono-cropping, meanwhile the maize and
sorghum grain yields did not suffer significant decreases in areas intercropped with crop and pasture (Table 6). Faced
with these results, the need to minimize the competition of the forage with the annual crop became evident, either by
means of under-application of herbicide levels or by sowing the forage in post emergence, in the sense of guaranteeing
satisfactory grain yields (Cobucci et al., 2001).
Figure 5. Effect of rotations and fertilizer levels on the grain yields of soybean and maize. For the crops,
F1 = liming for 30% base saturation + crop maintenance fertilizing and F2 = liming for 50% base
saturation + gradual corrective fertilizing. For the pastures, F1 and F2 = liming for 30% base saturation +
fertilizing for establishment and liming for 50% base saturation + fertilizing for establishment + biennial
PK fertilizing, respectively. Source: Vilela et al. (1999).

Table 6. Yields of maize, sorghum and soybean grains and maize and sorghum forage in function of the presence or
not of intercropped crop and pasture.

Crop Yield (kg/ha) 1


Monocrop Intercropped

Maize grain 2 6 877 6 795

Maize grain 3 6 354 6 401

Forage maize (green matter) 2 48 367 48 467

Grain sorghum 4 3 687 3 581

Forage sorghum (green matter) 4 32 333 32 867

Soybean 2 3 056 2 414

Soybean 5 2 971 2 677

1 Mean of 6 replicates.
2 Mean of four locations.
3 Mean of four locations with the application of 6g (a.i.)/ha of nicosulphuron in the intercropped maize.
4 Mean of three locations.
5 Mean of three locations with the application of 24g (a.i.)/ha of haloxyphop-methyl in the intercropped
soybean.

Source: adapted from Kluthcouski et al. (2000).

Contrarily, the responses in forage production are generally positive in the integration crop-pasture, because the
pastures respond promptly to the greater nutrient supply, which stays in the soil as a result of the area being used for
crops (Figure 6). As a result, the support capacity of the pasture and the systems productivity are substantially
elevated in relation to the results seen in degraded pastures (Table 7).
Figure 6. Forage matter in pastures established in succession with crops. (T1 = Brachiaria brizantha cv
Marandu + the protein reserve of Stylothanthes guianensis cv Minero; T2 = B. brizantha; T3 = B.
decumbens intercropped with S. guianensis cv Minero). Source: Magnabosco (2000).

Table 7. The support capacity and development of cattle reared (from 9 to 24 months old) in pastures renewed with
different strategies and submitted to a pasture pressure (PP) of 7% in a sandy soil in the municipality of Brasilndia,
Minas Gerais.

Renewal strategy Animal weight (kg) Stocking rate (AU/ha) 5 Productivity

Initial Final Rains Dry season (kg/ha/year)

Maize 1 181 374 3,04 0,83 334,5

Rice 2 176 371 2,79 0,83 297,0

Direct 3 177 388 2,55 0,80 298,5

Old pasture 176 374 1,51 0,77 178,5

Old pasture FM 4 176 278 1,20 0,60 51,0

1 Liming and fertilizing: 3,0 t/ha lime, 454 kg/ha 04-30-16, 39 kg/ha FTE BR 12, 32 kg/ha zinc
sulphate and 250 kg/ha of ammonium sulphate top-dressed.
2 Liming and fertilizing: 2,0 t/ha lime, 300 kg/ha 04-30-16, 30 kg/ha FTE BR 12, 20 kg/ha zinc
sulphate and 100 kg/ha ammonium sulphate and 50 kg/ha KCL top-dressed.
3 Liming and fertilizing: 1,4 t/ha lime, 165 kg/ha single superphosphate.
4 FM = farm management in degraded pasture.
5 AU/ha = 450 kg live weight.

Source: Barcellos et al. (1997).

Similar results to those shown in Table 7 have been observed in an experiment started in 1993/1994 at the Embrapa
Beef Cattle Station in Campo Grande.

The project was installed in an area of degraded Brachiaria decumbens pasture, which was recovered or recuperated
through different treatments: fertilizing, liming and mechanical means; renovation with a change of species - Brachiaria
brizantha and Panicum maximum, with sowing of soybean or maize etc. according to the various treatments. An area of
natural vegetation and one of degraded pasture were maintained as controls for comparison.

The main treatments constituted five production systems: S1 = continual pasture; S2 = continual cropping; S3 =
pasture for four years - crops for 4 years; S4 = crops for four years - pastures for 4 years; S5 = crop for one year -
pasture for three years (established in the second year with or without a maize crop). These systems were subdivided
into subsystems composed of soil preparation methods and cultivation methods: conventional and direct drilling,
summer crop and summer + winter crops; forage maintenance fertilizing and crops intercropped or not with forage
legumes in a total of 12 treatments (for more information see Macedo, 2001), details are as follows:

System 1 = continual pasture;

Subsystems:
PCSA - Brachiaria decumbens with no maintenance fertilizer;
PCCA - Brachiaria decumbens with maintenance fertilizer;
PCAL - Brachiaria decumbens with maintenance fertilizer; + legumes.

System 2 = continual cropping (CC);

Subsystems:
LCCV - soybean; conventional cultivation, only in summer, continuous soil preparation with discs;
LCCS - soybean/pearl millet; soil preparation alternating ploughing, discing and subsoiling;
LCPD - soybean/millet; direct drilling system;

System 3 = pasture for four years - crops for four years;

Subsystems:
P4-LV4 - Brachiaria decumbens - soybean;
P4-LVI4 - Brachiaria decumbens - soybean/millet in autumn/winter.

System 4 = crops for four years - pastures for 4 years;

Subsystems:
LV4-P4 - Panicum maximum cv Tanznia;
LVI4-P4 - soybean/millet - Panicum maximum cv Tanznia.

System 5 = crop for one year - pasture for three years;

Subsystems:
L1-P3S - soybean/millet - Brachiaria brizantha alone;
L1-P3Mi - soybean/millet - Brachiaria brizantha + millet cultivated simultaneously during formation.

The animal production results (Table 8) show that pastures of Brachiaria decumbens recuperated in 1993/94 (S1) could
produce about four to five times more than degraded pastures (DP). The residual fertilizer effect (1993/94) was
sufficient in order not to differentiate between the treatments with and without maintenance fertilization through three
animal cycles as well as the animal production. However, from the fourth cycle (1997/98) the production of pastures
with maintenance fertilization and with maintenance fertilization and legumes, PCCA and PCAL respectively, became
superior with significant differences over the pasture without maintenance fertilization (PCSA). It is emphasized that
the treatment with legumes (stylothanthes and calopogonium) gave a production systematically superior in the order of
15 kg of meat/ha/year. The animal production in pastures in the crop/pasture systems S4 and S5 gave productions in
the order of 689 to 789 and 591 to 842 kg live weight/ha respectively. With the exception of S4 where pastures of
Panicum maximum cv Tanznia received maintenance fertilizer of N (50 kg/ha/year), the B. brizantha pastures (S5)
did not receive any maintenance and were managed only with the residual soybean fertilizer in the first year. In both
systems a decrease is already seen in the animal stocking rate as a result of decreased soil fertility, principally
phosphorous (Macedo, 2001).

Table 8. Animal production (carcas equivalent kg/ha) in continuous pasture systems and in integrated systems of crop
and livestock in a dark red clay latosol. Campo Grande, Mato Grosso do Sul.

System 1994/95 1 1995/96 2 1996/97 2 1997/98 2 1998/99 2 Total

S1-PCSA 180 285 210 180 165 1020


S1-PCCA 195 255 195 255 240 1140
S1-PCAL 210 285 240 270 210 1215
S4-LV4-P4S - - - - 405 405
S4-LVI4-P4M - - - - 360 360
S5-LV1-P3S - 300 255 - - 555
S5-LVII-P3Mi - 435 270 - - 705
DP-Deg. Past. 30 45 60 60 90 285

1 282 days of pasture


2 337-340 days of pasture

Source: Macedo (2001).

However, greater weight gains will be associated with adequate pasture management (i.e. availability of forage) and
with attention to sanitary aspects and animal reproduction. Obviously, the genetic potential for animal weight gain is
important to assure more satisfactory results (Magnobosco et al., 2001). Furthermore, it is important to bear in mind
that a greater forage production allows higher stocking rates, as much in the dry as in the wet season (Magnobosco et
al., 2001), however the seasonality in forage production is not significantly altered whatever the forage species in
question (Figure 6).

Benefits for the Production System Economy

Various studies on crop-pasture integration have produced interesting economic results (Yokoyama et al., 1999; Cezar
et al., 2000 and Macedo, 2001). In the study which was being done through the Embrapa Beef Cattle Station for
example, the preliminary economic analysis of the results of six years of soybean production, two of maize and of five
livestock cycles showed that the crop-livestock integration could be a viable option to minimize agricultural business
risks (Costa and Macedo, 2001). The comparisons were carried out by taking into consideration animal production in
degraded pasture as the control. There were also simulated comparisons with prices of soybean, maize, cattle weight
and fertilizer, varying 20% above or below historic prices. The results are shown in Table 9.

Table 9. Net present value (NPV) of the additional cash flow per hectare for various combinations between prices of
cattle, soybean, maize and fertilizer, for continuous pasture and integrated crop-pasture systems when compared to a
degraded pasture. Values expressed in Reais (R$); numbers in brackets represent the decreasing order of advantage
between the different systems as regards the NPV.

Systems Soybean R$ 17,43/sack; maize R$ 11,58/sack, Cattle R$ 35,0 per 15 kg, maize R$ 11.58/sack,
fertilizer basic price 1 fertilizer basic price
Cattle (per 15 kg) Sack of soybean (50 kg)
33,00 35,00 37,00 15,00 17,43 20,00
PCSA 589,79 (4) 661,70 (4) 733,62 (4) 661,70 (2) 661,70 (4) 661,70 (4)
PCCA 466,96 (6) 548,94 (6) 630,92 (6) 548,94 (4) 548.94 (6) 548,94 (6)
PCAL 525,05 (5) 613,35 (5) 701,65 (5) 613,35 (3) 613,35 (5) 613,35 (5)
LV4-P4 742,37 (3) 746,70 (3) 751,03 (3) 416,04 (6) 746,70 (3) 1096,40 (3)
LVI4-P4 794,00 (2) 800,73 (2) 807,47 (2) 451,83 (5) 800, 73 (2) 1169,70 (2)
L1-P3S 339,03 (7) 371,89 (7) 404,75 (7) 220,21 (7) 371,89 (7) 532,31 (7)
L1-P3Mi 1205,80 (1) 1252,84 (1) 1229,87 (1) 1102,74 (1) 1252,80 (1) 1411,60 (1)
Cattle R$ 35,0 per 15 kg, soybean R$ Cattle R$ 35,0 per 15 kg, soybean R$
17,43/sack, fertilizer basic price 17,43/sack, maize R$ 11,58/sack
Sack of maize (50 kg) Fertilizers
6,50 8,00 11,58 - 20% Basic price + 20%
PCSA 661,70 (4) 661,70 (4) 661,70 (4) 711,65 (4) 661,70 (4) 611,73 (3)
PCCA 548,94 (6) 548,94 (6) 548,94 (6) 646,98 (6) 548,94 (6) 450,90 (6)
PCAL 613,35 (5) 613,35 (5) 613,35 (5) 711,39 (5) 613,35 (5) 515,31(5)
LV4-P4 746,70 (3) 746,70 (3) 746,70 (3) 898,23 (3) 746,70 (3) 595,17 (4)
LVI4-P4 800,73 (2) 800,73 (2) 800,73 (2) 952,26 (2) 800,73 (2) 649, 20 (2)
L1-P3S 371,89 (7) 371,89 (7) 371,89 (7) 482,77 (7) 371,89 (7) 261,01 (7)
L1-P3Mi 853,52 (1) 971,43 (1) 1252,84 (1) 1396,66 (1) 1252,80(1) 1109,00 (1)

1 Fertilizer basic price (R$/t): simple superphosphate: 271,00; formula 0-20-20: 400,00; formula 4-20-
20: 407,00; formula 5-25-5: 411,00; urea: 346,00.

Source: Costa and Macedo (2001)

The S5 system, subsystem L1P3Mi; characterized by one year of soybean/millet and 3 years of Brachiaria brizantha cv
Marandu, installed simultaneously with maize, was in first place in various simulations as regards the NPV. This
treatment offers a cash flow with the incoming from sales of soybean, millet and meat and appears to be very
attractive as the preliminary economic evaluation shows (Table 9). It is worth highlighting that, with the increase in
price of fertilizers, its application in pastures with maintenance fertilizer (PCCA and PCAL) makes its position
unfavourable as compared with the crop-livestock integration systems.

As for the S4 system, with four years of soybean cropping and subsequent implantation of Panicum maximum cv
Tanznia, one notes a significant increase in animal production in the first and second husbandry cycles, with a fall in
the third (results not presented). Seeing that only nitrogen maintenance fertilizing (50 kg N/ha/year) was used without
P and K, and with the hypothesis of the use of residual soybean fertilizer, the resulting productivity favoured its position
in the comparative scores.

It is important to note that the annual soybean fertilizing considerably increased the levels of available soil P. However,
pasture cultivated without maintenance fertilizer for four years after the soybean cycle accentuated the decline of soil P
levels, an essential production nutrient (Macedo, 2001). Perhaps S4 would not be a favourable strategy, as the return
to the four-year cycle soybean crop would involve more costly soil corrections for the farmer.

A conclusive analysis of the performance of the different systems will only be possible at the very end of the crop and
livestock cycles, after eight years. However, various hypotheses are being verified, at least partially: the improvement
of soil fertility by the crops, of the soil physical properties by the pastures and the favourable cash flow of the
integrated crop-pasture systems.

Even though the crop-livestock integration could be an extremely important alternative from the point of view of
sustainable animal production; farmers who already practice it having a considerable advantage of the others, it
demands various prerequisites in order to be used. Given the limits of infrastructure, financial resources, technical
knowledge, personal capacities and social barriers to its adoption it is probable that this system would be implemented
by a smaller proportion of farmers in relation to its potential area of use (Macedo, 2001 and Vilela et al., 2002).
Yokoyama et al. (1998) effectively highlighted that the greatest obstacles to the adoption of this technology are the
absence of appropriate on-farm machinery and its respective adoption costs.

To conclude, it is important to remember that, as well as the benefits mentioned in this work, the integration of crops
and pastures brings social benefits due to the direct and indirect creation of employment and also favours reduction of
migration to urban areas (Kluthcouski et al., 2000).

Other Benefits

Spain et al. (1996), Broch et al. (1997) and Cardoso (2000) summarized and enumerated the many advantages of the
crop-livestock integration with much authority as presented in the following.

Benefits of Cropping for Livestock Production

Speed and economy. The crop-livestock system facilitates the crop-livestock integration (maintaining
the same forage species) or the renovation (changing the forage species) of the pasture because the
return on investment is faster. This is due to the fact that grain crops can be produced in four to six
months. On the other hand, pasture formation after cropping is rapid and at a lower cost. Its worth
emphasizing that the better the soil nutrients the better the forage productivity and quality whether in
emphasizing that the better the soil nutrients the better the forage productivity and quality whether in
the intercropping, succession or rotation systems.

Residual fertilizer supply. The forages under intercropping, succession or rotation benefit from the
mineral nutrients supplied to the annual crops, which were not taken up. In the case of succession or
rotation with soybean, the forage can benefit even more from the additional 100 kg/ha of N
symbiotically fixed by the legume.

Forage production in the most critical time of the year. After the summer annual crop one can sow the
annual forages such as forage maize, sorghum for silage, for pasture, millet and oats in regions with a
colder winter. In this way one produces cattle feed as much under pasture (oats, millet and sorghum
forages) as a supplement through hay (oats and sorghum) and silage (maize and forage sorghum).
Also, one can sow the perennial forages after the annual crop in the inter-harvest period, knowing that
at this time - and due to climatic factors - their establishment will be partially compromised resulting in
lower forage production during the dry season.

Experience has shown that the perennial forages, principally the brachiaras, are more productive in the first year
following establishment; also staying green during the main part of the dry season. As an example of this Broch et al.
(1997) obtained meat yields of 375, 225 and 135 kg/ha/year in the first, second and third respectively of pasture after
the soybean crop.

Other advantages of agriculture for crop husbandry speak of the faster return on capital investment, pasture
recuperation, economy perennial pasture establishment and the ease of changing forage species.

Benefits of Livestock Production for Cropping

Crop rotation. The crop-livestock integration demands a greater rotation frequency of annual crops x
forages. This offers a reduction in the inoculum of pests, diseases and includes breaking their cycles.

Physical, chemical and biological soil recuperation. Thanks to the abundance and aggressiveness of
the roots of tropical forages, as well as the constant emission of new roots, also allied to the greater soil
biological activity, they promote nutrient recycling, the deposition of large quantities of surface and soil
organic material and soil aeration at depths that would be difficult to reach with conventional
equipment.

Improvement of Soil Structure. The structuring improvement, a fundamental physical condition in


tropical soils, mainly due to the organic material and root exhudates, leads to a better soil porosity,
water storage capacity and root growth of annual crops.

Soil water. There is a greater soil water storage capacity, mainly due to biological aeration and the
increase in the level of organic matter.

Soil cover. As well as animal forage production, the forage species serve as a source of soil cover for
the direct drilling system at the moment of transition to agriculture. The forage straw, when properly
managed, is sufficient to guarantee complete soil surface protection. As well as reducing soil water
evaporation it inhibits weed emergence and the attack of soil-borne fungi on cultivated plants.

A study conducted by Aidar et al. (2000) showed that the intercropping of brachiaria with maize and maize alone
produced greater biomass quantities, reaching 17 t/ha of dry material. Three months after desiccation there were still
about nine tons of residues. In this same study the authors verified that there were higher yields of irrigated black
beans when grown over Brachiaria ruziziensis straw, followed by residues of rice, of Brachiaria brizantha, and of
soybean and maize. They also observed the total absence of white mould (Sclerotinia sclerotiorum) in the black beans
cultivated on brachiaria straw, while there were severe attacks of this fungus disease when cultivated in the straw of
soybean, maize and rice.

Broch et al. (1977) also verified better soybean yields when cultivated over residues of B. brizantha. From the first to
the third year of successive soybean cultivation in previous bracharia areas the yield decreased from 3 500 to 3 100
kg/ha.

Advantages of Crop and Livestock Integration

Increase in the grain and meat production;


Reduced production costs;
Farmers with more capital;
Improvement and conservation of the soil productive capacities;
Rural sector development;
Greater economic stability;
Creation of direct and indirect employment; and
Sustainability of crop and livestock production.

For Spain et al. (1996) other advantages of the integration are: increased soil biological activity; higher nutrient
recycling efficiency; improvement of soil physical and chemical properties; a better supply and quality of forage in the
dry season; added value with higher profit than in any of the isolated activities.

Some additional advantages offered by the brachiarias are reported by Cardoso (2000):

Greater durability of the Brachiaria decumbens straw in soybean direct drilling as it decomposes slowly;
Higher competency of Brachiaria brizantha in suffocation of preceding forest re-growth by virtue of its
fasciculated roots forming a network; suggesting intense competition in the soil sub-surface and inhibiting other
species.
More persistence and vegetative vigour of grass pastures which predisposes eventual bacterial, fungal or algal
root associations that could fix atmospheric nitrogen;
Potatoes in areas with B. decumbens are cleaner and of better quality;
Strawberry farmers prefer brachiaria pasture areas for production because they impede the formation of soil
clumps due to their abundant root system.
clumps due to their abundant root system.
Cardoso (2000) concluded that these observations left little doubt that the brachiarias root system promotes the
improvement of the soil physical properties, making it friable, loose and soft in benefit of subsequent crops, perhaps
through the complimentary beneficial effect of associated fungi. One supposes that brachiaria could favour atmospheric
nitrogen-fixing organisms independently of symbiosis. Thus, as soil conditioners and nitrogen fixers, the brachiarias
benefit 50 million hectares which they cover in Brazil.

Final Considerations

The integration of the grain and livestock production systems constitutes a new paradigm for agriculture and animal
husbandry in the Cerrados region. These systems have the potential to increase grain, meat and milk productivity and
to reduce the risks of natural resources degradation. The results obtained with crop-livestock integration in the
Cerrados show the benefits of this system in agriculture and livestock production and in the improvement of the
physical, chemical and biological soil properties. However, the adoption of this practice by the farmers is still very
small. This is due, in part, to the greater complexity of the crop-pasture rotation and the need for high investment in
the acquisition of machinery and implements.

An association of grain and livestock producers would be one of the alternatives to incentivate the crop-livestock
system. Such an association could contribute to increase the cultivated grain area and animal production without the
need to open up new Cerrado areas.

The coexistence of well-structured systems of grain and livestock production in the Brazilian Cerrados will be one of the
factors, which will contribute, in a determinate manner, to the adoption of the crop-livestock rotation to increase the
pasture livestock productivity. In this way the harmonious and sustainable marriage of the livestock and agricultural
activities in this region can be foreseen.

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