Biofertilizer Application on Corn (Zea mays) Increases the Productivity and Quality of the Crop Without Causing Environmental Damage
2020
de Matos Nascimento, Andressa | Maciel, Alyne Martins | Silva, Jonathas Batista Gonçalves | Mendonça, Henrique Vieira | de Paula, Vanessa Romário | Otenio, Marcelo Henrique
This study evaluated the effect of applying biofertilizer in the soil on the cultivation of corn. Different doses of biofertilizer associated with chemical fertilizer were applied in the soil to meet the plants’ nutritional demand. Four months after sowing, plant samples were collected and evaluated, by measuring the height and productivity of biomass, dry matter, neutral detergent fiber (NDF), acid detergent fiber (ADF), crude protein (CP), and nitrogen (N). Soil samples were also collected to measure the concentrations of macronutrients, base saturation, and exchangeable acidity. The biofertilizer application did not alter the levels of dry matter, NDF, ADF, CP, and N in the plants, or the concentrations of nitrogen, phosphorus, magnesium, and copper in the soil. Besides this, the largest average values of the plant heights and levels of potassium in the soil were found in the treatment with the highest biofertilizer dose. Notably, there was a significant increase in the quantity of fresh and dry matter in the treatments that received biofertilizer in comparison with the controls. The results obtained indicated the potential of substituting conventional fertilization with fertirrigation using biofertilizer, an alternative procedure that can help reduce the environmental impacts caused by dairy farming, regarding the release of wastewater into watercourses.
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