Yield variation of rainfed rice as affected by field water availability and N fertilizer use in central Benin

Rice is mainly grown under rainfed conditions in West Africa. Unpredictable and variable rainfall, poor soil quality, and suboptimal crop management practices are the main determinants of low productivity. We assessed the effects of soil water availability and fertilizer application, and their inter...

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Autores principales: Niang, A., Becker, M., Ewert, F., Tanaka, A., Dieng, I., Saito, Kazuki
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/102025
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author Niang, A.
Becker, M.
Ewert, F.
Tanaka, A.
Dieng, I.
Saito, Kazuki
author_browse Becker, M.
Dieng, I.
Ewert, F.
Niang, A.
Saito, Kazuki
Tanaka, A.
author_facet Niang, A.
Becker, M.
Ewert, F.
Tanaka, A.
Dieng, I.
Saito, Kazuki
author_sort Niang, A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Rice is mainly grown under rainfed conditions in West Africa. Unpredictable and variable rainfall, poor soil quality, and suboptimal crop management practices are the main determinants of low productivity. We assessed the effects of soil water availability and fertilizer application, and their interaction on the yield of rainfed rice in Glazoué, Department of Zou-Collines, central Benin between 2010 and 2013. On-farm fertilizer management trials and field surveys were conducted in 13–39 farmers' fields per year. Field water conditions were visually assessed three times per week during the rice-growing season and flood and drought indices were calculated on the basis of number of days with ponded water and dry surface soil relative to the total number of days for the vegetative, the reproductive and whole rice-growing period. Variations in flood and drought indices were related to the sand content of the soil. While nitrogen was the most limiting nutrient, average response to N fertilizer application was low with an agronomic N use efficiency of only 7–9 kg grain per kg of N applied. Year-to-year variation in rainfall and spatial variation in field water status affected both rice yield and response to N fertilizer. Some 47% of the observed yield variation was explained by field water status and the amounts of N fertilizer applied, with rice response to N fertilizer being less when water was limited. We conclude that the prevailing blanket fertilizer recommendations are unlikely to contribute to yield increases in rainfed systems of West Africa. There is a need for field-specific recommendations that consider soil texture and the spatial–temporal dynamics of water availability.
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spelling CGSpace1020252025-12-08T09:54:28Z Yield variation of rainfed rice as affected by field water availability and N fertilizer use in central Benin Niang, A. Becker, M. Ewert, F. Tanaka, A. Dieng, I. Saito, Kazuki drought west africa Rice is mainly grown under rainfed conditions in West Africa. Unpredictable and variable rainfall, poor soil quality, and suboptimal crop management practices are the main determinants of low productivity. We assessed the effects of soil water availability and fertilizer application, and their interaction on the yield of rainfed rice in Glazoué, Department of Zou-Collines, central Benin between 2010 and 2013. On-farm fertilizer management trials and field surveys were conducted in 13–39 farmers' fields per year. Field water conditions were visually assessed three times per week during the rice-growing season and flood and drought indices were calculated on the basis of number of days with ponded water and dry surface soil relative to the total number of days for the vegetative, the reproductive and whole rice-growing period. Variations in flood and drought indices were related to the sand content of the soil. While nitrogen was the most limiting nutrient, average response to N fertilizer application was low with an agronomic N use efficiency of only 7–9 kg grain per kg of N applied. Year-to-year variation in rainfall and spatial variation in field water status affected both rice yield and response to N fertilizer. Some 47% of the observed yield variation was explained by field water status and the amounts of N fertilizer applied, with rice response to N fertilizer being less when water was limited. We conclude that the prevailing blanket fertilizer recommendations are unlikely to contribute to yield increases in rainfed systems of West Africa. There is a need for field-specific recommendations that consider soil texture and the spatial–temporal dynamics of water availability. 2018-03 2019-07-02T14:56:57Z 2019-07-02T14:56:57Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/102025 en Limited Access Springer Niang, A., Becker, M., Ewert, F., Tanaka, A., Dieng, I., and Saito, K. 2018. Yield variation of rainfed rice as affected by field water availability and N fertilizer use in central Benin. Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems 110(2): 293–305
spellingShingle drought
west africa
Niang, A.
Becker, M.
Ewert, F.
Tanaka, A.
Dieng, I.
Saito, Kazuki
Yield variation of rainfed rice as affected by field water availability and N fertilizer use in central Benin
title Yield variation of rainfed rice as affected by field water availability and N fertilizer use in central Benin
title_full Yield variation of rainfed rice as affected by field water availability and N fertilizer use in central Benin
title_fullStr Yield variation of rainfed rice as affected by field water availability and N fertilizer use in central Benin
title_full_unstemmed Yield variation of rainfed rice as affected by field water availability and N fertilizer use in central Benin
title_short Yield variation of rainfed rice as affected by field water availability and N fertilizer use in central Benin
title_sort yield variation of rainfed rice as affected by field water availability and n fertilizer use in central benin
topic drought
west africa
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/102025
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AT tanakaa yieldvariationofrainfedriceasaffectedbyfieldwateravailabilityandnfertilizeruseincentralbenin
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