Dry season performance of four tropical pasture legumes in subhumid west Africa as influenced by superphosphate application and weed control

The productivity and nutritive value of Chamaecrista rotundifolia cv. Wynn, Centrosema pascuorum cv. Cavalcade, Stylosanthes guianensis cv. Pucallpa and S. hamata cv. Verano as affected by single superphosphate fertilisation (SSP) and weed control were measured during the dry season in subhumid Nige...

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Autores principales: Peters, Michael, Tarawali, Shirley A., Alkamper, J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43354
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author Peters, Michael
Tarawali, Shirley A.
Alkamper, J.
author_browse Alkamper, J.
Peters, Michael
Tarawali, Shirley A.
author_facet Peters, Michael
Tarawali, Shirley A.
Alkamper, J.
author_sort Peters, Michael
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The productivity and nutritive value of Chamaecrista rotundifolia cv. Wynn, Centrosema pascuorum cv. Cavalcade, Stylosanthes guianensis cv. Pucallpa and S. hamata cv. Verano as affected by single superphosphate fertilisation (SSP) and weed control were measured during the dry season in subhumid Nigeria. Wynn, when growing in competition with the native vegetation, had the highest dry matter yields. During the dry season, legume yields were more stable than those of the associated grasses and herbs. Fertilisation with SSP at low levels of available soil phosphorus increased legume productivity but native grasses and herbs did not respond to the fertiliser applied. The nutritive value of all legume species was low for most of the dry season, with crude protein concentrations, in vitro dry matter digestibility, and phosphorus concentrations ranging between 5–7%, 40–50% and 0.02–0.05%, respectively. The decline of nutritive value during the dry season was largely a function of changes in leaf/stem/litter proportions. It is suggested that drought tolerance and capacity to retain leaf should receive more attention when evaluating forage species to be used in the dry season. Despite these limitations, Wynn has potential to complement the widely used Stylosanthes hamata cv. Verano in drier subhumid west Africa. The other species tested could be successfully used in legume mixtures. Despite these limitations, Wynn has potential to complement the widely used Stylosanthes hamata cv. Verano in drier subhumid west Africa. The other species tested could be successfully used in legume mixtures.
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spelling CGSpace433542025-11-12T05:58:01Z Dry season performance of four tropical pasture legumes in subhumid west Africa as influenced by superphosphate application and weed control Peters, Michael Tarawali, Shirley A. Alkamper, J. feed crops stylosanthes hamata stylosanthes guianensis centrosema dry season fertilizer application superphosphate plant establishment yields dry matter content estación seca aplicación de abonos superfosfato establecimiento de plantas rendimiento contenido de materia seca The productivity and nutritive value of Chamaecrista rotundifolia cv. Wynn, Centrosema pascuorum cv. Cavalcade, Stylosanthes guianensis cv. Pucallpa and S. hamata cv. Verano as affected by single superphosphate fertilisation (SSP) and weed control were measured during the dry season in subhumid Nigeria. Wynn, when growing in competition with the native vegetation, had the highest dry matter yields. During the dry season, legume yields were more stable than those of the associated grasses and herbs. Fertilisation with SSP at low levels of available soil phosphorus increased legume productivity but native grasses and herbs did not respond to the fertiliser applied. The nutritive value of all legume species was low for most of the dry season, with crude protein concentrations, in vitro dry matter digestibility, and phosphorus concentrations ranging between 5–7%, 40–50% and 0.02–0.05%, respectively. The decline of nutritive value during the dry season was largely a function of changes in leaf/stem/litter proportions. It is suggested that drought tolerance and capacity to retain leaf should receive more attention when evaluating forage species to be used in the dry season. Despite these limitations, Wynn has potential to complement the widely used Stylosanthes hamata cv. Verano in drier subhumid west Africa. The other species tested could be successfully used in legume mixtures. Despite these limitations, Wynn has potential to complement the widely used Stylosanthes hamata cv. Verano in drier subhumid west Africa. The other species tested could be successfully used in legume mixtures. 1997 2014-09-24T08:42:00Z 2014-09-24T08:42:00Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43354 en Open Access application/pdf
spellingShingle feed crops
stylosanthes hamata
stylosanthes guianensis
centrosema
dry season
fertilizer application
superphosphate
plant establishment
yields
dry matter content
estación seca
aplicación de abonos
superfosfato
establecimiento de plantas
rendimiento
contenido de materia seca
Peters, Michael
Tarawali, Shirley A.
Alkamper, J.
Dry season performance of four tropical pasture legumes in subhumid west Africa as influenced by superphosphate application and weed control
title Dry season performance of four tropical pasture legumes in subhumid west Africa as influenced by superphosphate application and weed control
title_full Dry season performance of four tropical pasture legumes in subhumid west Africa as influenced by superphosphate application and weed control
title_fullStr Dry season performance of four tropical pasture legumes in subhumid west Africa as influenced by superphosphate application and weed control
title_full_unstemmed Dry season performance of four tropical pasture legumes in subhumid west Africa as influenced by superphosphate application and weed control
title_short Dry season performance of four tropical pasture legumes in subhumid west Africa as influenced by superphosphate application and weed control
title_sort dry season performance of four tropical pasture legumes in subhumid west africa as influenced by superphosphate application and weed control
topic feed crops
stylosanthes hamata
stylosanthes guianensis
centrosema
dry season
fertilizer application
superphosphate
plant establishment
yields
dry matter content
estación seca
aplicación de abonos
superfosfato
establecimiento de plantas
rendimiento
contenido de materia seca
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43354
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AT tarawalishirleya dryseasonperformanceoffourtropicalpasturelegumesinsubhumidwestafricaasinfluencedbysuperphosphateapplicationandweedcontrol
AT alkamperj dryseasonperformanceoffourtropicalpasturelegumesinsubhumidwestafricaasinfluencedbysuperphosphateapplicationandweedcontrol