Alley cropping with Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) de Wit and Acioa barteri (Hook F.) Engl.

The effect of alley cropping with seven combinations of Acioa and Leucaena hedgerows and a control (no hedgerow) treatment on sequentially cropped maize and cowpea was studied in 1985 and 1986. The trial was carried out on an Alfisol in the humid zone of southwestern Nigeria. Hedgerows were establis...

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Main Authors: Siaw, D.E.K.A., Kang, B.T., Okali, D.U.U.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101702
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author Siaw, D.E.K.A.
Kang, B.T.
Okali, D.U.U.
author_browse Kang, B.T.
Okali, D.U.U.
Siaw, D.E.K.A.
author_facet Siaw, D.E.K.A.
Kang, B.T.
Okali, D.U.U.
author_sort Siaw, D.E.K.A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The effect of alley cropping with seven combinations of Acioa and Leucaena hedgerows and a control (no hedgerow) treatment on sequentially cropped maize and cowpea was studied in 1985 and 1986. The trial was carried out on an Alfisol in the humid zone of southwestern Nigeria. Hedgerows were established in 1983, using 4 m interhedgerow spacing and pruned to 25 cm height during cropping. Highest dry matter, wood, and nutrient yields of prunings of Acioa and Leucaena hedgerows were obtained with sole cropping. Growing Leucaena and Acioa in the same hedgerow suppressed dry matter production and nutrient yield of Acioa more than of Leucaena owing to the latter's faster growth. Total pruning dry matter yield was reduced as the proportion of Acioa increased in the combination. Leucaena prunings had higher nutrient yield than Acioa. Under 22-month old uncut hedgerows, weed biomass declined in the presence of Leucaena, either alone or in combination with Acioa. Weed weight under sole Leucaena hedgerows was about a third of that in the control plot. There was no significant effect of alley cropping on weed biomass, although alley cropping with Acioa and Leucaena hedgerows resulted in the dominance of broad leaf weeds while the control had a mixture of broadleaves and grasses. Alley cropping with various combinations of Acioa and Leucaena hedgerows increased maize and cowpea yields compared to control. Nitrogen application in both years increased maize grain yield. Mean yield increase due to N application in both years was highest in the control (47.2%) followed by the sole Acioa hedgerow (25.2%) and less in hedgerows with Leucaena. The results of observations over two years do not show any advantage for the tested Leucaena and Acioa combinations on maize and cowpea crops as compared to the sale hedgerows.
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spelling CGSpace1017022025-11-13T10:39:08Z Alley cropping with Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) de Wit and Acioa barteri (Hook F.) Engl. Siaw, D.E.K.A. Kang, B.T. Okali, D.U.U. alley cropping dry matter yields nutrients crop yield weeds infestation sole cropping maize cowpeas The effect of alley cropping with seven combinations of Acioa and Leucaena hedgerows and a control (no hedgerow) treatment on sequentially cropped maize and cowpea was studied in 1985 and 1986. The trial was carried out on an Alfisol in the humid zone of southwestern Nigeria. Hedgerows were established in 1983, using 4 m interhedgerow spacing and pruned to 25 cm height during cropping. Highest dry matter, wood, and nutrient yields of prunings of Acioa and Leucaena hedgerows were obtained with sole cropping. Growing Leucaena and Acioa in the same hedgerow suppressed dry matter production and nutrient yield of Acioa more than of Leucaena owing to the latter's faster growth. Total pruning dry matter yield was reduced as the proportion of Acioa increased in the combination. Leucaena prunings had higher nutrient yield than Acioa. Under 22-month old uncut hedgerows, weed biomass declined in the presence of Leucaena, either alone or in combination with Acioa. Weed weight under sole Leucaena hedgerows was about a third of that in the control plot. There was no significant effect of alley cropping on weed biomass, although alley cropping with Acioa and Leucaena hedgerows resulted in the dominance of broad leaf weeds while the control had a mixture of broadleaves and grasses. Alley cropping with various combinations of Acioa and Leucaena hedgerows increased maize and cowpea yields compared to control. Nitrogen application in both years increased maize grain yield. Mean yield increase due to N application in both years was highest in the control (47.2%) followed by the sole Acioa hedgerow (25.2%) and less in hedgerows with Leucaena. The results of observations over two years do not show any advantage for the tested Leucaena and Acioa combinations on maize and cowpea crops as compared to the sale hedgerows. 1991 2019-06-25T17:09:00Z 2019-06-25T17:09:00Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101702 en Limited Access Siaw, D.E.K.A., Kang, B.T. & Okali, D.U.U. (1991). Alley cropping with Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) de Wit and Acioa barteri (Hook F.) Engl. Agroforestry Systems, 14, 219-231.
spellingShingle alley cropping
dry matter
yields
nutrients
crop yield
weeds
infestation
sole cropping
maize
cowpeas
Siaw, D.E.K.A.
Kang, B.T.
Okali, D.U.U.
Alley cropping with Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) de Wit and Acioa barteri (Hook F.) Engl.
title Alley cropping with Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) de Wit and Acioa barteri (Hook F.) Engl.
title_full Alley cropping with Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) de Wit and Acioa barteri (Hook F.) Engl.
title_fullStr Alley cropping with Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) de Wit and Acioa barteri (Hook F.) Engl.
title_full_unstemmed Alley cropping with Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) de Wit and Acioa barteri (Hook F.) Engl.
title_short Alley cropping with Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) de Wit and Acioa barteri (Hook F.) Engl.
title_sort alley cropping with leucaena leucocephala lam de wit and acioa barteri hook f engl
topic alley cropping
dry matter
yields
nutrients
crop yield
weeds
infestation
sole cropping
maize
cowpeas
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101702
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