Fallow residue management effects on upland rice in three agroecological zones of West Africa

Improving fallow quality in upland rice-fallow rotations in West Africa through the site-specific use of leguminous cover crops has been shown to sustain the productivity of such systems. We studied the effects of a range of residue management practices (removal, burning, mulching and incorporation)...

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Autores principales: Akanvou, R., Becker, M., Chano, M., Johnson, D.E., Gbaka-Tcheche, H., Touré, A.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114481
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author Akanvou, R.
Becker, M.
Chano, M.
Johnson, D.E.
Gbaka-Tcheche, H.
Touré, A.
author_browse Akanvou, R.
Becker, M.
Chano, M.
Gbaka-Tcheche, H.
Johnson, D.E.
Touré, A.
author_facet Akanvou, R.
Becker, M.
Chano, M.
Johnson, D.E.
Gbaka-Tcheche, H.
Touré, A.
author_sort Akanvou, R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Improving fallow quality in upland rice-fallow rotations in West Africa through the site-specific use of leguminous cover crops has been shown to sustain the productivity of such systems. We studied the effects of a range of residue management practices (removal, burning, mulching and incorporation) on fallow biomass and N accumulation, on weed biomass and yield response of upland rice and on changes in soil physical and chemical characteristics in 2-year field trials conducted in three agroecological zones of Côte d'Ivoire. Across fallow management treatments and agroecological zones, rice yields were on average 20–30% higher in legume than in natural fallow plots. Weed biomass was highest in the savanna zone and lowest in the bimodal forest and tended to be less following a legume fallow. Regardless of the type of fallow vegetation and agroecological zone, biomass removal resulted in the lowest rice yields that varied from 0.5 t ha–1 in the derived savanna zone to 1.5 t ha–1 in the Guinea savanna zone. Burning of the fallow vegetation significantly increased yield over residue removal in the derived savanna (0.27 t ha–1, P<0.05) and bimodal forest zones (0.27 t ha–1, P<0.01), but not in the Guinea savanna. In both savanna environments, residue incorporation was superior to the farmers' practice of residue removal and rice yield increases were related to amounts of fallow N returned to the soil (r 2=0.803, P<0.01). In the forest zone, the farmers' practice of residue burning produced the highest yield (1.43 t ha-1 in the case of legumes) and resulted in the lowest weed biomass (0.02 t ha–1). Regardless of the site, improving the quality of the fallow or of its management had no significant effects on either soil physical or soil chemical characteristics after two fallow cycles. We conclude that incorporation of legume residues is a desirable practice for rice-based fallow rotation systems in savanna environments. No promising residue management alternatives to slash-and-burn were apparent for the forest zone. Determining the possible effects on soil productivity will require longer-term experiments.
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spelling CGSpace1144812024-11-15T08:52:25Z Fallow residue management effects on upland rice in three agroecological zones of West Africa Akanvou, R. Becker, M. Chano, M. Johnson, D.E. Gbaka-Tcheche, H. Touré, A. rice research Improving fallow quality in upland rice-fallow rotations in West Africa through the site-specific use of leguminous cover crops has been shown to sustain the productivity of such systems. We studied the effects of a range of residue management practices (removal, burning, mulching and incorporation) on fallow biomass and N accumulation, on weed biomass and yield response of upland rice and on changes in soil physical and chemical characteristics in 2-year field trials conducted in three agroecological zones of Côte d'Ivoire. Across fallow management treatments and agroecological zones, rice yields were on average 20–30% higher in legume than in natural fallow plots. Weed biomass was highest in the savanna zone and lowest in the bimodal forest and tended to be less following a legume fallow. Regardless of the type of fallow vegetation and agroecological zone, biomass removal resulted in the lowest rice yields that varied from 0.5 t ha–1 in the derived savanna zone to 1.5 t ha–1 in the Guinea savanna zone. Burning of the fallow vegetation significantly increased yield over residue removal in the derived savanna (0.27 t ha–1, P<0.05) and bimodal forest zones (0.27 t ha–1, P<0.01), but not in the Guinea savanna. In both savanna environments, residue incorporation was superior to the farmers' practice of residue removal and rice yield increases were related to amounts of fallow N returned to the soil (r 2=0.803, P<0.01). In the forest zone, the farmers' practice of residue burning produced the highest yield (1.43 t ha-1 in the case of legumes) and resulted in the lowest weed biomass (0.02 t ha–1). Regardless of the site, improving the quality of the fallow or of its management had no significant effects on either soil physical or soil chemical characteristics after two fallow cycles. We conclude that incorporation of legume residues is a desirable practice for rice-based fallow rotation systems in savanna environments. No promising residue management alternatives to slash-and-burn were apparent for the forest zone. Determining the possible effects on soil productivity will require longer-term experiments. 2000-09-05 2021-07-30T10:11:37Z 2021-07-30T10:11:37Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114481 en Limited Access Springer Akanvou R., Becker M., Chano M., Johnson D.E., Gbaka-Tcheche H., Toure A.Fallow residue management effects on upland rice in three agroecological zones of West Africa.Biology and Fertility of Soils.2000, Volume 31 :501-507.
spellingShingle rice
research
Akanvou, R.
Becker, M.
Chano, M.
Johnson, D.E.
Gbaka-Tcheche, H.
Touré, A.
Fallow residue management effects on upland rice in three agroecological zones of West Africa
title Fallow residue management effects on upland rice in three agroecological zones of West Africa
title_full Fallow residue management effects on upland rice in three agroecological zones of West Africa
title_fullStr Fallow residue management effects on upland rice in three agroecological zones of West Africa
title_full_unstemmed Fallow residue management effects on upland rice in three agroecological zones of West Africa
title_short Fallow residue management effects on upland rice in three agroecological zones of West Africa
title_sort fallow residue management effects on upland rice in three agroecological zones of west africa
topic rice
research
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114481
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