Effective Striga control and yield intensification on maize farms in western Kenya with N fertilizer and herbicide-resistant variety

Context Maize production in western Kenya is limited by the spread of parasitic weed Striga hermonthica and depletion of soil nutrient stocks. Nitrogen (N) fertilizer and imidazolinone resistant (IR) maize are key elements in the agronomic toolbox to control infestations and enhance yields Research...

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Main Authors: Roobroeck, D., Kimutai, G., Kanampiu, F., Ng'etich, W., Roing de Nowina, K., Vanlauwe, Bernard
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129944
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author Roobroeck, D.
Kimutai, G.
Kanampiu, F.
Ng'etich, W.
Roing de Nowina, K.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
author_browse Kanampiu, F.
Kimutai, G.
Ng'etich, W.
Roing de Nowina, K.
Roobroeck, D.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
author_facet Roobroeck, D.
Kimutai, G.
Kanampiu, F.
Ng'etich, W.
Roing de Nowina, K.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
author_sort Roobroeck, D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Context Maize production in western Kenya is limited by the spread of parasitic weed Striga hermonthica and depletion of soil nutrient stocks. Nitrogen (N) fertilizer and imidazolinone resistant (IR) maize are key elements in the agronomic toolbox to control infestations and enhance yields Research question The circumstances under which their use, individually or combined, is most effective on farmer fields have not been well documented. Inappropriate management decisions and low returns on investments arise from this knowledge gap, causing hunger and poverty in smallholder communities to persist. Methods Experiments were carried out on 60 fields in three different agroecosystems of western Kenya using full-factorial treatments with non-herbicide treated maize (DH) and herbicide treated maize (IR), and N fertilizer omission and application. Trials were stratified on a field with low and high soil fertility within individual farms and repeated over two seasons. Results Cultivating IR maize instead of DH maize decreased the emergence of Striga with 13 shoots m−2 on average while applying N fertilizer on DH maize led to a reduction of 5 shoots m−2 on average. Decreases of Striga by use of IR maize and N fertilizer were between 6 and 23 shoots m−2 larger at the site with high levels of infestation than at the sites with medium or low emergence. Input of N fertilizer increased grain harvests by 0.59 ton ha−1 on average while use of IR maize enhanced the productivity with 0.33 ton ha−1 on average. Use of N fertilizer had similar yield effects in all three sites, whereas use of IR maize at the site with high Striga emergence increased maize production by 0.26–0.39 ton ha−1 more than at the sites with medium or low emergence. Conclusions The greater Striga responses to IR maize and the greater yield responses to N fertilizer demonstrate their use could be optimized according to field conditions and management goals. Combining IR maize and N fertilizer has larger added yield benefits where their individual effects on grain productivity are smaller. Significance Findings from this study indicate that farmers in western Kenya require guidance on how to align the use of herbicide resistant maize and inorganic N inputs with the level of Striga infestation and maize yield on their fields for effectively controlling the pernicious weed and enhancing food production.
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spelling CGSpace1299442025-12-08T10:11:39Z Effective Striga control and yield intensification on maize farms in western Kenya with N fertilizer and herbicide-resistant variety Roobroeck, D. Kimutai, G. Kanampiu, F. Ng'etich, W. Roing de Nowina, K. Vanlauwe, Bernard weed control soil fertility maize striga sustainable intensification kenya Context Maize production in western Kenya is limited by the spread of parasitic weed Striga hermonthica and depletion of soil nutrient stocks. Nitrogen (N) fertilizer and imidazolinone resistant (IR) maize are key elements in the agronomic toolbox to control infestations and enhance yields Research question The circumstances under which their use, individually or combined, is most effective on farmer fields have not been well documented. Inappropriate management decisions and low returns on investments arise from this knowledge gap, causing hunger and poverty in smallholder communities to persist. Methods Experiments were carried out on 60 fields in three different agroecosystems of western Kenya using full-factorial treatments with non-herbicide treated maize (DH) and herbicide treated maize (IR), and N fertilizer omission and application. Trials were stratified on a field with low and high soil fertility within individual farms and repeated over two seasons. Results Cultivating IR maize instead of DH maize decreased the emergence of Striga with 13 shoots m−2 on average while applying N fertilizer on DH maize led to a reduction of 5 shoots m−2 on average. Decreases of Striga by use of IR maize and N fertilizer were between 6 and 23 shoots m−2 larger at the site with high levels of infestation than at the sites with medium or low emergence. Input of N fertilizer increased grain harvests by 0.59 ton ha−1 on average while use of IR maize enhanced the productivity with 0.33 ton ha−1 on average. Use of N fertilizer had similar yield effects in all three sites, whereas use of IR maize at the site with high Striga emergence increased maize production by 0.26–0.39 ton ha−1 more than at the sites with medium or low emergence. Conclusions The greater Striga responses to IR maize and the greater yield responses to N fertilizer demonstrate their use could be optimized according to field conditions and management goals. Combining IR maize and N fertilizer has larger added yield benefits where their individual effects on grain productivity are smaller. Significance Findings from this study indicate that farmers in western Kenya require guidance on how to align the use of herbicide resistant maize and inorganic N inputs with the level of Striga infestation and maize yield on their fields for effectively controlling the pernicious weed and enhancing food production. 2023-05 2023-04-11T08:49:00Z 2023-04-11T08:49:00Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129944 en Open Access application/pdf Elsevier Roobroeck, D., Kimutai, G., Kanampiu, F., Ng'etich, W., Roing de Nowina, K. & Vanlauwe, B. (2023). Effective Striga control and yield intensification on maize farms in western Kenya with N fertilizer and herbicide-resistant variety. Field Crops Research, 296: 108924, 1-8.
spellingShingle weed control
soil fertility
maize
striga
sustainable intensification
kenya
Roobroeck, D.
Kimutai, G.
Kanampiu, F.
Ng'etich, W.
Roing de Nowina, K.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
Effective Striga control and yield intensification on maize farms in western Kenya with N fertilizer and herbicide-resistant variety
title Effective Striga control and yield intensification on maize farms in western Kenya with N fertilizer and herbicide-resistant variety
title_full Effective Striga control and yield intensification on maize farms in western Kenya with N fertilizer and herbicide-resistant variety
title_fullStr Effective Striga control and yield intensification on maize farms in western Kenya with N fertilizer and herbicide-resistant variety
title_full_unstemmed Effective Striga control and yield intensification on maize farms in western Kenya with N fertilizer and herbicide-resistant variety
title_short Effective Striga control and yield intensification on maize farms in western Kenya with N fertilizer and herbicide-resistant variety
title_sort effective striga control and yield intensification on maize farms in western kenya with n fertilizer and herbicide resistant variety
topic weed control
soil fertility
maize
striga
sustainable intensification
kenya
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129944
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