Agronomic and economic efficiency of manure and urea fertilizers use on vertisols in Ethiopian highlands

Soil fertility depletion is among the major impediments to sustained agricultural productivity especially in the less developed countries because of limited application of fertilizers. Soil fertility maintenance requires a balanced application of inorganic and organic nutrient sources. This study wa...

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Autores principales: Erkossa, Teklu, Teklewold, H.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40601
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author Erkossa, Teklu
Teklewold, H.
author_browse Erkossa, Teklu
Teklewold, H.
author_facet Erkossa, Teklu
Teklewold, H.
author_sort Erkossa, Teklu
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Soil fertility depletion is among the major impediments to sustained agricultural productivity especially in the less developed countries because of limited application of fertilizers. Soil fertility maintenance requires a balanced application of inorganic and organic nutrient sources. This study was conducted on a Vertisol in Ethiopia to determine the optimum farm yard manure (M) and nitrogen (N) application rates for maximum return under cereal-pulse-cereal rotation system. The main and interaction effects of M and N significantly affected biomass, grain and straw yields of wheat (Triticum durum) and tef (Eragrostis tef), but the residual effect on chickpea (Cicer arietinum) was not significant. Application of 6 t M ha-1 and 30 kg N ha-1, gave the largest grain yield of both crops but a comparable result was obtained due to 3 t M ha-1 and 30 kg N ha-1. The economic analysis revealed that 6.85 t M ha-1 and 44 kg N ha-1 for wheat, and 4.53 t M ha-1 and 37 kg N ha-1 for tef were the economic optimum rates. The additional benefit obtained due to these rates was about 450 USD ha-1. Therefore, application of the economic optimum combination of both organic and inorganic sources of nitrogen is recommended for use on cereals in the cereal-legume-cereal rotation system.
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spelling CGSpace406012025-06-17T08:23:38Z Agronomic and economic efficiency of manure and urea fertilizers use on vertisols in Ethiopian highlands Erkossa, Teklu Teklewold, H. vertisols soil fertility organic fertilizers inorganic fertilizers fertilizers nitrogen fertilizers crop production legumes cereals straw cropping systems crop rotation data analysis economic analysis yields productivity profitability Soil fertility depletion is among the major impediments to sustained agricultural productivity especially in the less developed countries because of limited application of fertilizers. Soil fertility maintenance requires a balanced application of inorganic and organic nutrient sources. This study was conducted on a Vertisol in Ethiopia to determine the optimum farm yard manure (M) and nitrogen (N) application rates for maximum return under cereal-pulse-cereal rotation system. The main and interaction effects of M and N significantly affected biomass, grain and straw yields of wheat (Triticum durum) and tef (Eragrostis tef), but the residual effect on chickpea (Cicer arietinum) was not significant. Application of 6 t M ha-1 and 30 kg N ha-1, gave the largest grain yield of both crops but a comparable result was obtained due to 3 t M ha-1 and 30 kg N ha-1. The economic analysis revealed that 6.85 t M ha-1 and 44 kg N ha-1 for wheat, and 4.53 t M ha-1 and 37 kg N ha-1 for tef were the economic optimum rates. The additional benefit obtained due to these rates was about 450 USD ha-1. Therefore, application of the economic optimum combination of both organic and inorganic sources of nitrogen is recommended for use on cereals in the cereal-legume-cereal rotation system. 2009-03 2014-06-13T14:48:00Z 2014-06-13T14:48:00Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40601 en Limited Access Elsevier Erkossa, Teklu; Teklewold, H. 2009. Agronomic and economic efficiency of manure and urea fertilizers use on vertisols in Ethiopian highlands. Agricultural Sciences in China, 8(3):352-360. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/S1671-2927(08)60219-9
spellingShingle vertisols
soil fertility
organic fertilizers
inorganic fertilizers
fertilizers
nitrogen fertilizers
crop production
legumes
cereals
straw
cropping systems
crop rotation
data analysis
economic analysis
yields
productivity
profitability
Erkossa, Teklu
Teklewold, H.
Agronomic and economic efficiency of manure and urea fertilizers use on vertisols in Ethiopian highlands
title Agronomic and economic efficiency of manure and urea fertilizers use on vertisols in Ethiopian highlands
title_full Agronomic and economic efficiency of manure and urea fertilizers use on vertisols in Ethiopian highlands
title_fullStr Agronomic and economic efficiency of manure and urea fertilizers use on vertisols in Ethiopian highlands
title_full_unstemmed Agronomic and economic efficiency of manure and urea fertilizers use on vertisols in Ethiopian highlands
title_short Agronomic and economic efficiency of manure and urea fertilizers use on vertisols in Ethiopian highlands
title_sort agronomic and economic efficiency of manure and urea fertilizers use on vertisols in ethiopian highlands
topic vertisols
soil fertility
organic fertilizers
inorganic fertilizers
fertilizers
nitrogen fertilizers
crop production
legumes
cereals
straw
cropping systems
crop rotation
data analysis
economic analysis
yields
productivity
profitability
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40601
work_keys_str_mv AT erkossateklu agronomicandeconomicefficiencyofmanureandureafertilizersuseonvertisolsinethiopianhighlands
AT teklewoldh agronomicandeconomicefficiencyofmanureandureafertilizersuseonvertisolsinethiopianhighlands