The potential of conservation agriculture to improve nitrogen fixation in cowpea under the semi-arid conditions of Kenya

Low-cost but productive crop intensification options are needed to assist smallholder farmers in the tropics to move away from poverty. This study assessed the capacity of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp.) to perform biological N fixation (BNF) under no-tillage practices, crop residue cover and...

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Autores principales: Binacchi, F., Rusinamhodzi, Leonard, Cadisch, Georg
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Frontiers Media 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125124
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author Binacchi, F.
Rusinamhodzi, Leonard
Cadisch, Georg
author_browse Binacchi, F.
Cadisch, Georg
Rusinamhodzi, Leonard
author_facet Binacchi, F.
Rusinamhodzi, Leonard
Cadisch, Georg
author_sort Binacchi, F.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Low-cost but productive crop intensification options are needed to assist smallholder farmers in the tropics to move away from poverty. This study assessed the capacity of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp.) to perform biological N fixation (BNF) under no-tillage practices, crop residue cover and intercropping with maize (Zea mays L.). The study was performed during the long rains of 2017 at Kiboko experimental station, located in semi-arid eastern Kenya. The research field trials had been running for three years (6 cropping seasons) by the time the sampling took place. The experimental set up was a split-plot design: main plots being tillage system (no till + maize stover retention (CA), and conventional tillage to 15 cm depth without mulch retention (CT)), sub-plot being cropping system (maize-cowpea intercrop, maize monocrop, and cowpea monocrop). Cowpea plants were sampled at 50% flowering stage and at physiological maturity to investigate biomass production and %N derived from the atmosphere (%Ndfa) through the 15N natural abundance technique, using maize as a reference control. Results showed that the number of nodules per plant was higher in CA treatments rather than in CT although not significant (p>0.05). Mean cowpea grain yield at harvest varied between 472 – 590 kg ha‐1 in intercrops whereas grain yield in monocrops was between 1465 - 1618 kg ha-1. Significant differences were however recorded between treatments with CT monocropped cowpea at flowering recording the highest mean %Ndfa (62%) and CT intercrop the lowest (52%). At harvest stage CA inter recorded the highest %Ndfa (54%) while CT intercrop the lowest (41%). The %Ndfa was higher (p<0.05) at flowering (between 57- 69%) compared with 45 - 64 % at harvest stage. Overall cowpeas in intercrops derived between 17.8 - 22.8 kg ha-1 of their total N from atmospheric dinitrogen fixation while monocrops between 54.9 - 55.2 kg ha-1. The effect of CA on BNF was positive but not significantly different from CT. These results suggest that CA has the potential to enhance the BNF process but there is a need to explore in future alternative spatial arrangement and variety choice in intercropping of cowpea and maize to optimize the BNF process.
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spelling CGSpace1251242025-12-08T10:29:22Z The potential of conservation agriculture to improve nitrogen fixation in cowpea under the semi-arid conditions of Kenya Binacchi, F. Rusinamhodzi, Leonard Cadisch, Georg sustainable agriculture smallholders farmers cowpeas conservation agriculture biological nitrogen fixation cropping systems kenya Low-cost but productive crop intensification options are needed to assist smallholder farmers in the tropics to move away from poverty. This study assessed the capacity of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp.) to perform biological N fixation (BNF) under no-tillage practices, crop residue cover and intercropping with maize (Zea mays L.). The study was performed during the long rains of 2017 at Kiboko experimental station, located in semi-arid eastern Kenya. The research field trials had been running for three years (6 cropping seasons) by the time the sampling took place. The experimental set up was a split-plot design: main plots being tillage system (no till + maize stover retention (CA), and conventional tillage to 15 cm depth without mulch retention (CT)), sub-plot being cropping system (maize-cowpea intercrop, maize monocrop, and cowpea monocrop). Cowpea plants were sampled at 50% flowering stage and at physiological maturity to investigate biomass production and %N derived from the atmosphere (%Ndfa) through the 15N natural abundance technique, using maize as a reference control. Results showed that the number of nodules per plant was higher in CA treatments rather than in CT although not significant (p>0.05). Mean cowpea grain yield at harvest varied between 472 – 590 kg ha‐1 in intercrops whereas grain yield in monocrops was between 1465 - 1618 kg ha-1. Significant differences were however recorded between treatments with CT monocropped cowpea at flowering recording the highest mean %Ndfa (62%) and CT intercrop the lowest (52%). At harvest stage CA inter recorded the highest %Ndfa (54%) while CT intercrop the lowest (41%). The %Ndfa was higher (p<0.05) at flowering (between 57- 69%) compared with 45 - 64 % at harvest stage. Overall cowpeas in intercrops derived between 17.8 - 22.8 kg ha-1 of their total N from atmospheric dinitrogen fixation while monocrops between 54.9 - 55.2 kg ha-1. The effect of CA on BNF was positive but not significantly different from CT. These results suggest that CA has the potential to enhance the BNF process but there is a need to explore in future alternative spatial arrangement and variety choice in intercropping of cowpea and maize to optimize the BNF process. 2022 2022-10-20T07:41:21Z 2022-10-20T07:41:21Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125124 en Open Access application/pdf Frontiers Media Binacchi, F., Rusinamhodzi, L. & Cadisch, G. (2022). The potential of conservation agriculture to improve nitrogen fixation in cowpea under the semi-arid conditions of Kenya. Frontiers in Agronomy, 4: 988090, 1-12.
spellingShingle sustainable agriculture
smallholders
farmers
cowpeas
conservation agriculture
biological nitrogen fixation
cropping systems
kenya
Binacchi, F.
Rusinamhodzi, Leonard
Cadisch, Georg
The potential of conservation agriculture to improve nitrogen fixation in cowpea under the semi-arid conditions of Kenya
title The potential of conservation agriculture to improve nitrogen fixation in cowpea under the semi-arid conditions of Kenya
title_full The potential of conservation agriculture to improve nitrogen fixation in cowpea under the semi-arid conditions of Kenya
title_fullStr The potential of conservation agriculture to improve nitrogen fixation in cowpea under the semi-arid conditions of Kenya
title_full_unstemmed The potential of conservation agriculture to improve nitrogen fixation in cowpea under the semi-arid conditions of Kenya
title_short The potential of conservation agriculture to improve nitrogen fixation in cowpea under the semi-arid conditions of Kenya
title_sort potential of conservation agriculture to improve nitrogen fixation in cowpea under the semi arid conditions of kenya
topic sustainable agriculture
smallholders
farmers
cowpeas
conservation agriculture
biological nitrogen fixation
cropping systems
kenya
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125124
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