Agriculture without burning: restoration of altered areas with chop-and-mulch sequential agroforestry systems in the Amazon region.

Traditional shifting cultivation in the Amazon region has caused negative environmental and social effects due to the use of fire. This type of agriculture has been criticized because it results in emission of large amounts of carbon into the atmosphere and a loss of soil productive potential. Since 1991, Project SHIFT-Tipitamba has researched this type of agriculture and, in a subsequent phase, attempted to propose solutions that could be adopted in northeastern Pará, a region of ancient colonization in Amazon and highly anthropized based on an exclusively slash-and-burn agricultural system for more than 100 years. This paper presents some results obtained over two decades of research on these agricultural systems and proposes a method for the recovery or maintenance of the productive potential of these areas based on sequential agroforestry with secondary vegetation management and chop-and-mulch land preparation.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: SHIMIZU, M. K., KATO, O. R., FIGUEIREDO, R. de O., VASCONCELOS, S. S., SÁ, T. D. de A., BORGES, A. C. M. R.
Other Authors: MAURICIO KADOOKA SHIMIZU, CPATU; OSVALDO RYOHEI KATO, CPATU; RICARDO DE OLIVEIRA FIGUEIREDO, CNPMA; STEEL SILVA VASCONCELOS, CPATU; TATIANA DEANE DE ABREU SA, CPATU; ANNA CHRISTINA M ROFFE BORGES, CPATU.
Format: Artigo de periódico biblioteca
Language:English
eng
Published: 2014-12-31
Subjects:Agricultura sem queima, Shift cultivation, Slash-and-burn, Derruba-e-queima, Amazon, Sistema agroflorestal, Tipitamba., Amazonia.,
Online Access:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1003995
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