Tomato crop response to short-duration legume green manures in tropical vegetable systems

The potential of legume green manure (GM) as an alternative to mineral N fertilizer in tropical horticulture has received scant attention. The feasibility of meeting N needs of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) with GM was studied in six field experiments at three locations in major vegetable g...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Tho¨nnissen, Carmen, Midmore, David J., Ladha, Jagdish K., Holmer, Robert J., Schmidhalter, Urs
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 2000
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/167096
_version_ 1855533803638882304
author Tho¨nnissen, Carmen
Midmore, David J.
Ladha, Jagdish K.
Holmer, Robert J.
Schmidhalter, Urs
author_browse Holmer, Robert J.
Ladha, Jagdish K.
Midmore, David J.
Schmidhalter, Urs
Tho¨nnissen, Carmen
author_facet Tho¨nnissen, Carmen
Midmore, David J.
Ladha, Jagdish K.
Holmer, Robert J.
Schmidhalter, Urs
author_sort Tho¨nnissen, Carmen
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The potential of legume green manure (GM) as an alternative to mineral N fertilizer in tropical horticulture has received scant attention. The feasibility of meeting N needs of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) with GM was studied in six field experiments at three locations in major vegetable growing areas of Taiwan and the Philippines between 1993 and 1995. Legume biomass, N2 fixation and N accumulation, and tomato yield and N uptake were quantified within a 6‐mo experiment cropping pattern. Yields of GM‐amended tomato crops were compared with those amended with fertilizer N (0–150 kg N ha−1). The residual effect of the fertilizing method of a second crop (maize; Zea mays L.) was estimated at AVRDC by measures of biomass and N uptake 30 d after sowing. Legume N recovery in tomato crops was traced with 15N at Mariano Marcos State University (MMSU). Soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] harvested at 60 to 74 d accumulated a minimum of 2.8 Mg ha−1 biomass and 100 kg ha−1 N in all locations and seasons. A maximum of 6 Mg biomass ha−1 and 140 kg N ha−1 was reached in the wet season (WS) at AVRDC. Indigofera (Indigofera tinctoria L.) and mungbean [Vigna radiata (L.) Wilcz.] biomass yields were more variable and always inferior than soybean yields. Tomato yields across locations ranged from 3 to 70 Mg fruit ha−1. Tomato yields responded to GM N in the WS in Taiwan and in the northern Philippines, comparing favorably with fertilizer at 38 to 120 kg N ha−1. No response to GM N was found in the dry season (DS) at AVRDC or at Bukidnon Resources Company, Inc. (BRCI). The 15N experiments showed that only a small fraction of legume N (9–15%) was recovered by the tomato crop at MMSU. Maize biomass and N uptake, following the tomato crop, was increased with soybean GM compared with the control in the AVRDC WS and DS. Tomato yield response to GM N is high on infertile soils and tomato N requirement can be substituted fully or partially by GM, depending on soil N mineralization.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace167096
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2000
publishDateRange 2000
publishDateSort 2000
publisher Wiley
publisherStr Wiley
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1670962025-12-08T09:54:28Z Tomato crop response to short-duration legume green manures in tropical vegetable systems Tho¨nnissen, Carmen Midmore, David J. Ladha, Jagdish K. Holmer, Robert J. Schmidhalter, Urs The potential of legume green manure (GM) as an alternative to mineral N fertilizer in tropical horticulture has received scant attention. The feasibility of meeting N needs of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) with GM was studied in six field experiments at three locations in major vegetable growing areas of Taiwan and the Philippines between 1993 and 1995. Legume biomass, N2 fixation and N accumulation, and tomato yield and N uptake were quantified within a 6‐mo experiment cropping pattern. Yields of GM‐amended tomato crops were compared with those amended with fertilizer N (0–150 kg N ha−1). The residual effect of the fertilizing method of a second crop (maize; Zea mays L.) was estimated at AVRDC by measures of biomass and N uptake 30 d after sowing. Legume N recovery in tomato crops was traced with 15N at Mariano Marcos State University (MMSU). Soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] harvested at 60 to 74 d accumulated a minimum of 2.8 Mg ha−1 biomass and 100 kg ha−1 N in all locations and seasons. A maximum of 6 Mg biomass ha−1 and 140 kg N ha−1 was reached in the wet season (WS) at AVRDC. Indigofera (Indigofera tinctoria L.) and mungbean [Vigna radiata (L.) Wilcz.] biomass yields were more variable and always inferior than soybean yields. Tomato yields across locations ranged from 3 to 70 Mg fruit ha−1. Tomato yields responded to GM N in the WS in Taiwan and in the northern Philippines, comparing favorably with fertilizer at 38 to 120 kg N ha−1. No response to GM N was found in the dry season (DS) at AVRDC or at Bukidnon Resources Company, Inc. (BRCI). The 15N experiments showed that only a small fraction of legume N (9–15%) was recovered by the tomato crop at MMSU. Maize biomass and N uptake, following the tomato crop, was increased with soybean GM compared with the control in the AVRDC WS and DS. Tomato yield response to GM N is high on infertile soils and tomato N requirement can be substituted fully or partially by GM, depending on soil N mineralization. 2000-03 2024-12-19T12:57:01Z 2024-12-19T12:57:01Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/167096 en Open Access Wiley Tho¨nnissen, Carmen; Midmore, David J.; Ladha, Jagdish K.; Holmer, Robert J. and Schmidhalter, Urs. 2000. Tomato crop response to short-duration legume green manures in tropical vegetable systems. Agronomy Journal, Volume 92 no. 2 p. 245-253
spellingShingle Tho¨nnissen, Carmen
Midmore, David J.
Ladha, Jagdish K.
Holmer, Robert J.
Schmidhalter, Urs
Tomato crop response to short-duration legume green manures in tropical vegetable systems
title Tomato crop response to short-duration legume green manures in tropical vegetable systems
title_full Tomato crop response to short-duration legume green manures in tropical vegetable systems
title_fullStr Tomato crop response to short-duration legume green manures in tropical vegetable systems
title_full_unstemmed Tomato crop response to short-duration legume green manures in tropical vegetable systems
title_short Tomato crop response to short-duration legume green manures in tropical vegetable systems
title_sort tomato crop response to short duration legume green manures in tropical vegetable systems
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/167096
work_keys_str_mv AT thonnissencarmen tomatocropresponsetoshortdurationlegumegreenmanuresintropicalvegetablesystems
AT midmoredavidj tomatocropresponsetoshortdurationlegumegreenmanuresintropicalvegetablesystems
AT ladhajagdishk tomatocropresponsetoshortdurationlegumegreenmanuresintropicalvegetablesystems
AT holmerrobertj tomatocropresponsetoshortdurationlegumegreenmanuresintropicalvegetablesystems
AT schmidhalterurs tomatocropresponsetoshortdurationlegumegreenmanuresintropicalvegetablesystems