AUTHOR=Nascimento Vagner , Ferrari Samuel , Lima Ronaldo Cintra , Bonini Carolina Dos Santos Batista , Prado Evandro Pereira , Galindo Fernando Shintate , Delfim Jorge João , Arf Orivaldo , Souza Loiane Fernanda Romão de , Molina-Roco Mauricio , Velázquez-Martí Borja , Korany Shereen Magdy , Alsherif Emad A. , Jalal Arshad , Teixeira Filho Marcelo Carvalho Minhoto TITLE=Nutritional aspects and yield of corn intercropped with cover crops and inoculated with diazotrophic bacteria JOURNAL=Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems VOLUME=Volume 9 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/sustainable-food-systems/articles/10.3389/fsufs.2025.1562977 DOI=10.3389/fsufs.2025.1562977 ISSN=2571-581X ABSTRACT=Intercropping corn with cover crops and inoculating with diazotrophic bacteria are sustainable low-cost practices that enhance nutrient cycling and uptake, leading to improved crop yield. Thus, this study evaluated the effects of monocropped corn versus intercropping with cover crops alongside foliar inoculation with Azospirillum brasilense. The experiment was conducted during the autumn-winter season in Dracena, within the Nova Alta Paulista region, Brazil, using a sandy-textured dystrophic Ultisol. The experiment was designed in a randomized blocks in a 4 × 2 factorial scheme, having four replicates. The treatments consisted of the cultivation of corn alone and intercropped with cover crops (Crotalaria spectabilis, Urochloa ruziziensis and C. spectabilis + U. ruziziensis) in the presence and absence inoculation with Azospirillum brasilense via foliar spray at crop growth stage V4. The inoculant contained strains AbV5 and AbV6 of A. brasilense (2 × 108 viable cells ml−1) applied at 500 ml ha−1. Intercropping corn with U. ruziziensis under inoculation, as well as corn with C. spectabilis + U. ruziziensis, regardless of inoculation, significantly increased grain yield in the second year. The corn intercropped with C. spectabilis irrespective of inoculation enhanced relative leaf chlorophyll content at the V4, V8, and R1 stages. In addition, intercropping corn with U. ruziziensis also enhanced leaf phosphorus (P) content while reducing sulfur (S) content. These findings suggest that farmers can optimize corn production by intercropping with Urochloa ruziziensis and Crotalaria spectabilis alongside diazotrophic bacterial inoculation to improve nutrient use efficiency and corn nutrition while reducing reliance on synthetic fertilizers and supporting low-carbon agriculture.