Effect of tillage on the growth and yield of cowpea varieties in Sudan savanna agroecology of Northern Nigeria

Field study was conducted during the rainy seasons (July-November) of 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 at the Research Farm of the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Minjibir, Kano State, Nigeria; to compare responses of six cowpea varieties to tillage. The treatments consisted of tilla...

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Autores principales: Ewansiha, S.U., Udensi, U.E., Kamara, A.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Sciencedomain International 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75777
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author Ewansiha, S.U.
Udensi, U.E.
Kamara, A.
author_browse Ewansiha, S.U.
Kamara, A.
Udensi, U.E.
author_facet Ewansiha, S.U.
Udensi, U.E.
Kamara, A.
author_sort Ewansiha, S.U.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Field study was conducted during the rainy seasons (July-November) of 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 at the Research Farm of the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Minjibir, Kano State, Nigeria; to compare responses of six cowpea varieties to tillage. The treatments consisted of tillage systems (zero tillage, flat tillage and ridge tillage) as the main plot and cowpea varieties (IT89KD-391, IT90K-277-2, IT97K-461-4, IT97K-499-35, IT98K-131-2, and IT98K-506-1) as the sub-plot. The treatments were arranged as split plot laid out in a randomized complete block design with four replications. Zero tillage was significantly superior in influencing days to maturity, canopy height, intercepted photosynthetic active radiation (IPAR) and leaf area index but not total dry matter and grain yield of cowpea. A positive and significant association was recorded for days to physiological maturity and canopy height across the tillage systems with a correlation coefficient of ≤ 40% for days to maturity and ≥50% for canopy height. Though flat tillage showed a positive correlation with intercepted photosynthetic active radiation (IPAR) and leaf area (LAI), but this association was not significant. However, ridge tillage showed a positive and significant correlation with IPAR and LAI (r =0.378*** and 0.384***). All the tillage systems showed a high and significant positive correlation with cowpea dry matter and fodder yield (r= 0.54*** to 0.77***). Across varieties, grain yield was better with flat tillage than zero and ridge tillage systems, with 10% yield advantage over the two. Zero and ridge tillage were similar in their effects on grain yield. Except for IPAR, LAI and total dry matter (TDM), the interaction effect of cowpea varieties and tillage systems was significant. Our result point to the fact that extensive soil tillage (especially, conventional tillage) may not be necessary for cowpea production in this agro-ecology with a high percentage of sand and a sandy loam as soil textural class. Following our result, we may recommended varieties for the different tillage systems as follows: IT98K-131-2, IT97K-461-4, IT90K-277-2, IT98K-506-1 (grain) and IT89KD-391/IT97K-461-4 (best for fodder) for zero tillage system; IT90K-277-2, IT97K-499-35, IT98K-131-2 and IT98K-506-1(grain) and IT89KD-391/IT97K-499-35 (best for fodder) for flat-tillage; IT98K-131-2, IT90K-277-2, IT98K-506-1 and IT97K-464-4(grain) and IT90K-277-2/ IT89KD-391 (best for fodder) for ridge tillage)
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spelling CGSpace757772025-11-11T10:39:39Z Effect of tillage on the growth and yield of cowpea varieties in Sudan savanna agroecology of Northern Nigeria Ewansiha, S.U. Udensi, U.E. Kamara, A. fodder cowpeas Field study was conducted during the rainy seasons (July-November) of 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 at the Research Farm of the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Minjibir, Kano State, Nigeria; to compare responses of six cowpea varieties to tillage. The treatments consisted of tillage systems (zero tillage, flat tillage and ridge tillage) as the main plot and cowpea varieties (IT89KD-391, IT90K-277-2, IT97K-461-4, IT97K-499-35, IT98K-131-2, and IT98K-506-1) as the sub-plot. The treatments were arranged as split plot laid out in a randomized complete block design with four replications. Zero tillage was significantly superior in influencing days to maturity, canopy height, intercepted photosynthetic active radiation (IPAR) and leaf area index but not total dry matter and grain yield of cowpea. A positive and significant association was recorded for days to physiological maturity and canopy height across the tillage systems with a correlation coefficient of ≤ 40% for days to maturity and ≥50% for canopy height. Though flat tillage showed a positive correlation with intercepted photosynthetic active radiation (IPAR) and leaf area (LAI), but this association was not significant. However, ridge tillage showed a positive and significant correlation with IPAR and LAI (r =0.378*** and 0.384***). All the tillage systems showed a high and significant positive correlation with cowpea dry matter and fodder yield (r= 0.54*** to 0.77***). Across varieties, grain yield was better with flat tillage than zero and ridge tillage systems, with 10% yield advantage over the two. Zero and ridge tillage were similar in their effects on grain yield. Except for IPAR, LAI and total dry matter (TDM), the interaction effect of cowpea varieties and tillage systems was significant. Our result point to the fact that extensive soil tillage (especially, conventional tillage) may not be necessary for cowpea production in this agro-ecology with a high percentage of sand and a sandy loam as soil textural class. Following our result, we may recommended varieties for the different tillage systems as follows: IT98K-131-2, IT97K-461-4, IT90K-277-2, IT98K-506-1 (grain) and IT89KD-391/IT97K-461-4 (best for fodder) for zero tillage system; IT90K-277-2, IT97K-499-35, IT98K-131-2 and IT98K-506-1(grain) and IT89KD-391/IT97K-499-35 (best for fodder) for flat-tillage; IT98K-131-2, IT90K-277-2, IT98K-506-1 and IT97K-464-4(grain) and IT90K-277-2/ IT89KD-391 (best for fodder) for ridge tillage) 2014-10-10 2016-06-22T15:00:53Z 2016-06-22T15:00:53Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75777 en Open Access application/pdf Sciencedomain International Ewansiha, S.U., Udensi, U.E. & Kamara, A. (2014). Effect of tillage on the growth and yield of cowpea varieties in Sudan savanna agroecology of Northern Nigeria. Annual Research & Review in Biology, 5(3), 275-284.
spellingShingle fodder
cowpeas
Ewansiha, S.U.
Udensi, U.E.
Kamara, A.
Effect of tillage on the growth and yield of cowpea varieties in Sudan savanna agroecology of Northern Nigeria
title Effect of tillage on the growth and yield of cowpea varieties in Sudan savanna agroecology of Northern Nigeria
title_full Effect of tillage on the growth and yield of cowpea varieties in Sudan savanna agroecology of Northern Nigeria
title_fullStr Effect of tillage on the growth and yield of cowpea varieties in Sudan savanna agroecology of Northern Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Effect of tillage on the growth and yield of cowpea varieties in Sudan savanna agroecology of Northern Nigeria
title_short Effect of tillage on the growth and yield of cowpea varieties in Sudan savanna agroecology of Northern Nigeria
title_sort effect of tillage on the growth and yield of cowpea varieties in sudan savanna agroecology of northern nigeria
topic fodder
cowpeas
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75777
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AT udensiue effectoftillageonthegrowthandyieldofcowpeavarietiesinsudansavannaagroecologyofnorthernnigeria
AT kamaraa effectoftillageonthegrowthandyieldofcowpeavarietiesinsudansavannaagroecologyofnorthernnigeria