Leucaena hedgerow intercropping and cattle manure application in the Ethiopian highlands. II. Maize yields and nutrient uptake

The effects of Leucaena leucocephala and L. pallida prunings and cattle manure on maize nutrient uptake and yield were investigated in a hedgerow inter-cropping trial in the Ethiopian highlands. Hedgerow inter-cropping (also called alley cropping) is an agroforestry system in which trees are grown i...

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Main Authors: Lupwayi, N.Z., Haque, I., Saka, A.R., Siaw, D.E.K.A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/30100
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author Lupwayi, N.Z.
Haque, I.
Saka, A.R.
Siaw, D.E.K.A.
author_browse Haque, I.
Lupwayi, N.Z.
Saka, A.R.
Siaw, D.E.K.A.
author_facet Lupwayi, N.Z.
Haque, I.
Saka, A.R.
Siaw, D.E.K.A.
author_sort Lupwayi, N.Z.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The effects of Leucaena leucocephala and L. pallida prunings and cattle manure on maize nutrient uptake and yield were investigated in a hedgerow inter-cropping trial in the Ethiopian highlands. Hedgerow inter-cropping (also called alley cropping) is an agroforestry system in which trees are grown in dense hedges between alleys where short-cycle crops are grown. The hedges are pruned periodically during the cropping period and the prunings are added to the soil as green manure. For each leucaena species, the experiment had 16 treatments resulting from a factorial combination of four levels of leucaena leaf prunings (no prunings applied: first prunings applied; first and second prunings applied: first, second and third prunings (no prunings applied: first prunings applied; first and second prunings applied: first, second and third prunings applied), two levels of air-dried cattle manure (0 and 3 t dry matter ha-1 and two levels of N fertilizer (0 and 40 kg N ha-1 as urea). Uptake of N, P and K increased significantly with application of the three nutrient sources, but uptake of Ca and Mg either did not respond or decreased with application of prunings and manure. All the three factors increased maize grain and stover yields significantly, usually with no significant interactions between the factors. At least two applications of prunings were required to significantly increase nutrient uptake and maize yield. Maize in the row closest to the hedge did not respond to these nutrient inputs. It is concluded that hedgerow intercropping, with or without manure application, can increase crop yields moderately (to 2-3 t ha-1 maize grain yields) in the highlands, but P, Ca and Mg may have to be supplied from external sources if they are deficient in the soil. Additional N is still required for higher yields (>4 t ha-1 maize grain yields). However, quantification of the competition effects of the trees is also required to confirm these results.
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spelling CGSpace301002024-05-01T08:16:34Z Leucaena hedgerow intercropping and cattle manure application in the Ethiopian highlands. II. Maize yields and nutrient uptake Lupwayi, N.Z. Haque, I. Saka, A.R. Siaw, D.E.K.A. leucaena intercropping cattle alley cropping farm yard manure zea mays yield nutrient uptake calcium magnesium nitrogen phosphorus leaves prunning The effects of Leucaena leucocephala and L. pallida prunings and cattle manure on maize nutrient uptake and yield were investigated in a hedgerow inter-cropping trial in the Ethiopian highlands. Hedgerow inter-cropping (also called alley cropping) is an agroforestry system in which trees are grown in dense hedges between alleys where short-cycle crops are grown. The hedges are pruned periodically during the cropping period and the prunings are added to the soil as green manure. For each leucaena species, the experiment had 16 treatments resulting from a factorial combination of four levels of leucaena leaf prunings (no prunings applied: first prunings applied; first and second prunings applied: first, second and third prunings (no prunings applied: first prunings applied; first and second prunings applied: first, second and third prunings applied), two levels of air-dried cattle manure (0 and 3 t dry matter ha-1 and two levels of N fertilizer (0 and 40 kg N ha-1 as urea). Uptake of N, P and K increased significantly with application of the three nutrient sources, but uptake of Ca and Mg either did not respond or decreased with application of prunings and manure. All the three factors increased maize grain and stover yields significantly, usually with no significant interactions between the factors. At least two applications of prunings were required to significantly increase nutrient uptake and maize yield. Maize in the row closest to the hedge did not respond to these nutrient inputs. It is concluded that hedgerow intercropping, with or without manure application, can increase crop yields moderately (to 2-3 t ha-1 maize grain yields) in the highlands, but P, Ca and Mg may have to be supplied from external sources if they are deficient in the soil. Additional N is still required for higher yields (>4 t ha-1 maize grain yields). However, quantification of the competition effects of the trees is also required to confirm these results. 1998-12-01 2013-06-11T09:26:14Z 2013-06-11T09:26:14Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/30100 en Open Access Springer Biology and Fertility of Soils;28: 196-203
spellingShingle leucaena
intercropping
cattle
alley cropping
farm yard manure
zea mays
yield
nutrient uptake
calcium
magnesium
nitrogen
phosphorus
leaves
prunning
Lupwayi, N.Z.
Haque, I.
Saka, A.R.
Siaw, D.E.K.A.
Leucaena hedgerow intercropping and cattle manure application in the Ethiopian highlands. II. Maize yields and nutrient uptake
title Leucaena hedgerow intercropping and cattle manure application in the Ethiopian highlands. II. Maize yields and nutrient uptake
title_full Leucaena hedgerow intercropping and cattle manure application in the Ethiopian highlands. II. Maize yields and nutrient uptake
title_fullStr Leucaena hedgerow intercropping and cattle manure application in the Ethiopian highlands. II. Maize yields and nutrient uptake
title_full_unstemmed Leucaena hedgerow intercropping and cattle manure application in the Ethiopian highlands. II. Maize yields and nutrient uptake
title_short Leucaena hedgerow intercropping and cattle manure application in the Ethiopian highlands. II. Maize yields and nutrient uptake
title_sort leucaena hedgerow intercropping and cattle manure application in the ethiopian highlands ii maize yields and nutrient uptake
topic leucaena
intercropping
cattle
alley cropping
farm yard manure
zea mays
yield
nutrient uptake
calcium
magnesium
nitrogen
phosphorus
leaves
prunning
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/30100
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AT sakaar leucaenahedgerowintercroppingandcattlemanureapplicationintheethiopianhighlandsiimaizeyieldsandnutrientuptake
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