Maize (Zea mays L.) yield and soil physical properties as affected by the previous plantain cropping systems, tillage and nitrogen application

We evaluated if cropping maize immediately after plantain is affected by the previous plantain systems and if tillage or N fertilizer would affect maize growth and grain yield and soil physical properties. The on-farm experiment was conducted at Mfou in the central Cameroon on a clayey, kaolinitic,...

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Main Authors: Tueche, J.R., Hauser, S.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/82616
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author Tueche, J.R.
Hauser, S.
author_browse Hauser, S.
Tueche, J.R.
author_facet Tueche, J.R.
Hauser, S.
author_sort Tueche, J.R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description We evaluated if cropping maize immediately after plantain is affected by the previous plantain systems and if tillage or N fertilizer would affect maize growth and grain yield and soil physical properties. The on-farm experiment was conducted at Mfou in the central Cameroon on a clayey, kaolinitic, Typic Kandiudult. The previous plantain cropping systems that had been established between 2002 and 2006 had 4 systems: two planted legumes (1) Flemingia macrophylla, (2) Pueraria phaseoloides, (3) an intercrop with hot pepper and (4) natural regrowth. In 2006, all plantain plots were cleared and split into 4, to assess the response of maize to tillage versus no – till and of 60 kg ha−1 of N as urea versus nil in a 2 × 2 factorial design. Bush fallow of 8 years of age not cropped during the plantain phase served as control. Maize grain yield was highest in the previously not cropped bush control and lowest in the previous Flemingia system. Grain yield in the previous Pueraria and natural regrowth systems were not different from control. Maize grain yield was highest when tillage was combined with fertilizer application, significantly higher from individual tillage or fertilizer application. Tilled only and fertilized only produced higher yields than no-till and no fertilizer. Soil physical properties were affected by tillage but did not remain different until the end of the maize growing phase. N fertilizer application had no effect on soil physical properties. Differences in maize grain yield could not be explained by soil physical properties and correlations with maize yield parameters were generally weak.
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spelling CGSpace826162024-05-01T08:16:14Z Maize (Zea mays L.) yield and soil physical properties as affected by the previous plantain cropping systems, tillage and nitrogen application Tueche, J.R. Hauser, S. flemingia macrophylla pueraria phaseoloides soil physical properties maize yields soil tillage cropping systems We evaluated if cropping maize immediately after plantain is affected by the previous plantain systems and if tillage or N fertilizer would affect maize growth and grain yield and soil physical properties. The on-farm experiment was conducted at Mfou in the central Cameroon on a clayey, kaolinitic, Typic Kandiudult. The previous plantain cropping systems that had been established between 2002 and 2006 had 4 systems: two planted legumes (1) Flemingia macrophylla, (2) Pueraria phaseoloides, (3) an intercrop with hot pepper and (4) natural regrowth. In 2006, all plantain plots were cleared and split into 4, to assess the response of maize to tillage versus no – till and of 60 kg ha−1 of N as urea versus nil in a 2 × 2 factorial design. Bush fallow of 8 years of age not cropped during the plantain phase served as control. Maize grain yield was highest in the previously not cropped bush control and lowest in the previous Flemingia system. Grain yield in the previous Pueraria and natural regrowth systems were not different from control. Maize grain yield was highest when tillage was combined with fertilizer application, significantly higher from individual tillage or fertilizer application. Tilled only and fertilized only produced higher yields than no-till and no fertilizer. Soil physical properties were affected by tillage but did not remain different until the end of the maize growing phase. N fertilizer application had no effect on soil physical properties. Differences in maize grain yield could not be explained by soil physical properties and correlations with maize yield parameters were generally weak. 2011-10 2017-06-29T07:45:05Z 2017-06-29T07:45:05Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/82616 en Limited Access Elsevier Tueche, J.R. & Hauser, S. (2011). Maize (Zea mays L.) yield and soil physical properties as affected by the previous plantain cropping systems, tillage and nitrogen application. Soil and Tillage Research, 115, 88-93.
spellingShingle flemingia macrophylla
pueraria phaseoloides
soil physical properties
maize
yields
soil tillage
cropping systems
Tueche, J.R.
Hauser, S.
Maize (Zea mays L.) yield and soil physical properties as affected by the previous plantain cropping systems, tillage and nitrogen application
title Maize (Zea mays L.) yield and soil physical properties as affected by the previous plantain cropping systems, tillage and nitrogen application
title_full Maize (Zea mays L.) yield and soil physical properties as affected by the previous plantain cropping systems, tillage and nitrogen application
title_fullStr Maize (Zea mays L.) yield and soil physical properties as affected by the previous plantain cropping systems, tillage and nitrogen application
title_full_unstemmed Maize (Zea mays L.) yield and soil physical properties as affected by the previous plantain cropping systems, tillage and nitrogen application
title_short Maize (Zea mays L.) yield and soil physical properties as affected by the previous plantain cropping systems, tillage and nitrogen application
title_sort maize zea mays l yield and soil physical properties as affected by the previous plantain cropping systems tillage and nitrogen application
topic flemingia macrophylla
pueraria phaseoloides
soil physical properties
maize
yields
soil tillage
cropping systems
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/82616
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