A água do solo e o sombreamento dos cafezais na américa central

The coffee plant does not thrive well under shade in most of the coffee areas of the State of São Paulo, Brazil. It has been shown that water competition from the shade trees during the dry season is the factor responsible for the failure in growing coffee under shade in São Paulo. In all cases where the coffee plants were not thriving well under shade, the soil moisture after two to three months of drought was at the wilting point at the depths most utilised by the root systems of shade trees and coffee plants. In open plantations this was never observed. All commercial coffee plantations of Central America are shaded. Most of them are located in areas with a dry season as long as in São Paulo and some times even longer. A comparative study of the climatological factors, methods of cultivation and most common species of shade trees was made. No one of these factors explained the different behavior of the coffee plant under shade in Central America and in São Paulo. The available soil water was measured in many coffee plantations in Costa Rica and El Salvador after four months without apreeiable rainfall. In all cases it was' found that, the actual moisture percentage was considerably higher than the wilting point. The amount of available water held by soils in São Paulo and Central America does not seem to be significantly different, although this was not carefully determined. It is suggested that a comparative study of the moisture-tension curves of soils of São Paulo and Central America might explain the different behavior of the coffee plant with shade under these two different conditions. It is possible that, as a consequence of a much steeper moisture-tension curve, the plants in São Paulo soils transpire freely until the soil moisture reaches the wilting point. This would result in a rapid soil water consumption. If the Central American soils have a smoother moisture-tension curve, the Avater absorption and transpiration rate by plants may be slower and as a consequence the available water may last longer in the soil. The ratio of the moisture equivalent to the wilting point was found to be around 1.29 for the soils studied in the Meseta Central of Costa Rica, around 1.44 for those in El Salvador and 1.94 for the ashy soils in the vicinity of San Salvador volcano.

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Main Author: Franco,Coaraci M.
Format: Digital revista
Language:Portuguese
Published: Instituto Agronômico de Campinas 1951
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0006-87051951000200002
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spelling oai:scielo:S0006-870519510002000022010-05-26A água do solo e o sombreamento dos cafezais na américa centralFranco,Coaraci M.The coffee plant does not thrive well under shade in most of the coffee areas of the State of São Paulo, Brazil. It has been shown that water competition from the shade trees during the dry season is the factor responsible for the failure in growing coffee under shade in São Paulo. In all cases where the coffee plants were not thriving well under shade, the soil moisture after two to three months of drought was at the wilting point at the depths most utilised by the root systems of shade trees and coffee plants. In open plantations this was never observed. All commercial coffee plantations of Central America are shaded. Most of them are located in areas with a dry season as long as in São Paulo and some times even longer. A comparative study of the climatological factors, methods of cultivation and most common species of shade trees was made. No one of these factors explained the different behavior of the coffee plant under shade in Central America and in São Paulo. The available soil water was measured in many coffee plantations in Costa Rica and El Salvador after four months without apreeiable rainfall. In all cases it was' found that, the actual moisture percentage was considerably higher than the wilting point. The amount of available water held by soils in São Paulo and Central America does not seem to be significantly different, although this was not carefully determined. It is suggested that a comparative study of the moisture-tension curves of soils of São Paulo and Central America might explain the different behavior of the coffee plant with shade under these two different conditions. It is possible that, as a consequence of a much steeper moisture-tension curve, the plants in São Paulo soils transpire freely until the soil moisture reaches the wilting point. This would result in a rapid soil water consumption. If the Central American soils have a smoother moisture-tension curve, the Avater absorption and transpiration rate by plants may be slower and as a consequence the available water may last longer in the soil. The ratio of the moisture equivalent to the wilting point was found to be around 1.29 for the soils studied in the Meseta Central of Costa Rica, around 1.44 for those in El Salvador and 1.94 for the ashy soils in the vicinity of San Salvador volcano.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInstituto Agronômico de CampinasBragantia v.11 n.4-6 19511951-06-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0006-87051951000200002pt10.1590/S0006-87051951000200002
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countrycode BR
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language Portuguese
format Digital
author Franco,Coaraci M.
spellingShingle Franco,Coaraci M.
A água do solo e o sombreamento dos cafezais na américa central
author_facet Franco,Coaraci M.
author_sort Franco,Coaraci M.
title A água do solo e o sombreamento dos cafezais na américa central
title_short A água do solo e o sombreamento dos cafezais na américa central
title_full A água do solo e o sombreamento dos cafezais na américa central
title_fullStr A água do solo e o sombreamento dos cafezais na américa central
title_full_unstemmed A água do solo e o sombreamento dos cafezais na américa central
title_sort água do solo e o sombreamento dos cafezais na américa central
description The coffee plant does not thrive well under shade in most of the coffee areas of the State of São Paulo, Brazil. It has been shown that water competition from the shade trees during the dry season is the factor responsible for the failure in growing coffee under shade in São Paulo. In all cases where the coffee plants were not thriving well under shade, the soil moisture after two to three months of drought was at the wilting point at the depths most utilised by the root systems of shade trees and coffee plants. In open plantations this was never observed. All commercial coffee plantations of Central America are shaded. Most of them are located in areas with a dry season as long as in São Paulo and some times even longer. A comparative study of the climatological factors, methods of cultivation and most common species of shade trees was made. No one of these factors explained the different behavior of the coffee plant under shade in Central America and in São Paulo. The available soil water was measured in many coffee plantations in Costa Rica and El Salvador after four months without apreeiable rainfall. In all cases it was' found that, the actual moisture percentage was considerably higher than the wilting point. The amount of available water held by soils in São Paulo and Central America does not seem to be significantly different, although this was not carefully determined. It is suggested that a comparative study of the moisture-tension curves of soils of São Paulo and Central America might explain the different behavior of the coffee plant with shade under these two different conditions. It is possible that, as a consequence of a much steeper moisture-tension curve, the plants in São Paulo soils transpire freely until the soil moisture reaches the wilting point. This would result in a rapid soil water consumption. If the Central American soils have a smoother moisture-tension curve, the Avater absorption and transpiration rate by plants may be slower and as a consequence the available water may last longer in the soil. The ratio of the moisture equivalent to the wilting point was found to be around 1.29 for the soils studied in the Meseta Central of Costa Rica, around 1.44 for those in El Salvador and 1.94 for the ashy soils in the vicinity of San Salvador volcano.
publisher Instituto Agronômico de Campinas
publishDate 1951
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0006-87051951000200002
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