Crotalaria ochroleuca as a green manure crop in Uganda

The potential of Crotalaria ochroleuca check for this species in other resources as a green manure crop was evaluated in a series of on-station and on-farm trials on reddish kaolinitic loam and sandy clay loam soils in Uganda. Production of the green manure by intercropping Crotalaria with either m...

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Main Authors: Wortmann, Charles S., Isabirye, M., Musa, S
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43311
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author Wortmann, Charles S.
Isabirye, M.
Musa, S
author_browse Isabirye, M.
Musa, S
Wortmann, Charles S.
author_facet Wortmann, Charles S.
Isabirye, M.
Musa, S
author_sort Wortmann, Charles S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The potential of Crotalaria ochroleuca check for this species in other resources as a green manure crop was evaluated in a series of on-station and on-farm trials on reddish kaolinitic loam and sandy clay loam soils in Uganda. Production of the green manure by intercropping Crotalaria with either maize or beans was found to be feasible with little reduction in food crop yield and a mean Land Equivalent Ratio of 1.3. The large amounts of N in the Crotalaria indicates that large quantities of N were biologically fixed. Mean maize grain yields following Crotalaria sole crop were 180% and 240% of maize grain yields following maize in two on-station trials and nine on-farm trials, respectively. Mean maize grain yield following bean in rotation were not significantly less compared to maize following Crotalaria, but grain yields were low in both seasons of on-station trials due to adverse conditions. Mean maize stover yield following Crotalaria was 185% of the stover yield when maize followed beans in rotation. In on-farm trials, maize grain yield following Crotalaria was 160% of the maize yield following beans. Bean seed yields in the second season after Crotalaria production were 120 and 150% in plots with Crotalaria in the first season as compared to maize and bean as the first season crop. A green manure of Crotalaria was effective in improving the productivity of the system but there may be opportunities to improve the efficiency of use of the large amounts of nitrogen biologically fixed by the Crotalaria.
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spelling CGSpace433112023-02-15T05:12:51Z Crotalaria ochroleuca as a green manure crop in Uganda Wortmann, Charles S. Isabirye, M. Musa, S crotalaria green manures phaseolus vulgaris zea mays on-farm research crop yield nitrogen fixation nutrient uptake abonos verdes investigación en campo rendimiento de cultivos fijación del nitrógeno absorción de sustancias nutritivas The potential of Crotalaria ochroleuca check for this species in other resources as a green manure crop was evaluated in a series of on-station and on-farm trials on reddish kaolinitic loam and sandy clay loam soils in Uganda. Production of the green manure by intercropping Crotalaria with either maize or beans was found to be feasible with little reduction in food crop yield and a mean Land Equivalent Ratio of 1.3. The large amounts of N in the Crotalaria indicates that large quantities of N were biologically fixed. Mean maize grain yields following Crotalaria sole crop were 180% and 240% of maize grain yields following maize in two on-station trials and nine on-farm trials, respectively. Mean maize grain yield following bean in rotation were not significantly less compared to maize following Crotalaria, but grain yields were low in both seasons of on-station trials due to adverse conditions. Mean maize stover yield following Crotalaria was 185% of the stover yield when maize followed beans in rotation. In on-farm trials, maize grain yield following Crotalaria was 160% of the maize yield following beans. Bean seed yields in the second season after Crotalaria production were 120 and 150% in plots with Crotalaria in the first season as compared to maize and bean as the first season crop. A green manure of Crotalaria was effective in improving the productivity of the system but there may be opportunities to improve the efficiency of use of the large amounts of nitrogen biologically fixed by the Crotalaria. 1994 2014-09-24T08:41:56Z 2014-09-24T08:41:56Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43311 en Open Access
spellingShingle crotalaria
green manures
phaseolus vulgaris
zea mays
on-farm research
crop yield
nitrogen fixation
nutrient uptake
abonos verdes
investigación en campo
rendimiento de cultivos
fijación del nitrógeno
absorción de sustancias nutritivas
Wortmann, Charles S.
Isabirye, M.
Musa, S
Crotalaria ochroleuca as a green manure crop in Uganda
title Crotalaria ochroleuca as a green manure crop in Uganda
title_full Crotalaria ochroleuca as a green manure crop in Uganda
title_fullStr Crotalaria ochroleuca as a green manure crop in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Crotalaria ochroleuca as a green manure crop in Uganda
title_short Crotalaria ochroleuca as a green manure crop in Uganda
title_sort crotalaria ochroleuca as a green manure crop in uganda
topic crotalaria
green manures
phaseolus vulgaris
zea mays
on-farm research
crop yield
nitrogen fixation
nutrient uptake
abonos verdes
investigación en campo
rendimiento de cultivos
fijación del nitrógeno
absorción de sustancias nutritivas
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43311
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AT isabiryem crotalariaochroleucaasagreenmanurecropinuganda
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