100774 Replacement of Inefficient arabica Coffee Plantations By Macadamia Nut Orchards.

Poster Number 453-1200

See more from this Division: ASA Section: Agronomic Production Systems
See more from this Session: Agronomic Production Systems, General Poster

Wednesday, November 9, 2016
Phoenix Convention Center North, Exhibit Hall CDE

Marcos José Perdoná, Agriculture, APTA, Bauru, BRAZIL and Rogério Peres Soratto, Department of Crop Science, College of Agricultural Sciences, São Paulo State University – UNESP, Botucatu / SP, Brazil
Poster Presentation
  • Poster-Perdoná-ASA-2016.pdf (738.9 kB)
  • Abstract:
    Macadamia (Macadamia integrifolia Maiden & Betche) is a high value nut and Brazilian nut industries operates with a half of capacity. The long pay back of monocrop macadamia has been the main bottleneck for the expansion of this crop. An efficient way to reduce the costs of implementation and maintenance of the orchard and get an early economic return is to use intercropping with the Arabica coffee (Coffea arabica L.) crop. Every year approximately 7,000 hectares of coffee plantations are eradicated in the State of São Paulo, Brazil, and it is possible that areas occupied by coffee plantations, with eradication prognosis, can offer opportunity to enabling installation of macadamia orchards. The aim of this work is to study ways of replacement of inefficient coffee plantations for macadamia orchards. The experiment is been conducted in Galia, São Paulo, Brazil. A randomized block design with four replications and six treatments is been used: 1 - elimination of a coffee trees and planting of macadamia in its grave (D); 2 - planting macadamia between two coffee plants with pruning in the orthotropic stem at 40 cm height (R); 3 - planting macadamia between two coffee plants with pruning in the reproductive branches at 30 cm long (E); 4 - planting macadamia between two unpruned coffee plants (M); 5 - single macadamia planted in coffee eradicated area (S); and 6 - single coffee (C). The inefficient coffee crop was a spacing 4 x 1 m. Each plot was occupy an area of 6 x 4m (24 m2). The partial shading collaborated in the early development of macadamia trees, but a dense shading, when the coffee trees have not suffered any pruning, was harmful to macadamia trees. Partial results indicate the need to eliminate coffee or unpruned for better growth of macadamia intercropped.

    See more from this Division: ASA Section: Agronomic Production Systems
    See more from this Session: Agronomic Production Systems, General Poster