Survival and yield of the plantain Ebang (Musa spp., AAB genome, False Horn) produced from corm fragment initiated plants and suckers after hot water treatment in Southern Cameroon

Plantain (Musa spp.) is the most important food cash crop in SouthernCameroon. Farmers suffer severe income losses through yield losses due to pest anddisease infestation of suckers planted without any measure taken to remove pestsand diseases. This paper reports on the first trial conducted under f...

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Main Authors: Mekoa, C., Hauser, S.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: International Society for Horticultural Science 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90377
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author Mekoa, C.
Hauser, S.
author_browse Hauser, S.
Mekoa, C.
author_facet Mekoa, C.
Hauser, S.
author_sort Mekoa, C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Plantain (Musa spp.) is the most important food cash crop in SouthernCameroon. Farmers suffer severe income losses through yield losses due to pest anddisease infestation of suckers planted without any measure taken to remove pestsand diseases. This paper reports on the first trial conducted under farmers’condition on the performance of hot water treated suckers versus plants producedfrom corm fragments (CFP). Both techniques serve the purpose of planting pest(mainly nematode) and disease free propagules. Plantains were monitored for 50months after planting. Preflowering losses, mainly to death for unidentified reasonswere highest in CFP material. Uprooting and pseudostem break were not differentbetween CFP material and hot water and untreated suckers. Mean bunch mass washighest in CFP material. Due to the high plant losses of CFP material, bunch yield ofthe plant crop was lower than when conventional suckers were hot water treated.CFP material yield did not differ from that of traditionally prepared suckers. Rootnumber and root health in CFP plants were better than in both sucker treatments.None of these advantages was carried over to the first ratoon crop. CFP plants havea high potential to increase yields yet the weakness of high plant losses in thejuvenile phase needs to be overcome to make the technique adoptable.
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spelling CGSpace903772024-04-25T06:01:17Z Survival and yield of the plantain Ebang (Musa spp., AAB genome, False Horn) produced from corm fragment initiated plants and suckers after hot water treatment in Southern Cameroon Mekoa, C. Hauser, S. plant losses plantain propagation technique root health Plantain (Musa spp.) is the most important food cash crop in SouthernCameroon. Farmers suffer severe income losses through yield losses due to pest anddisease infestation of suckers planted without any measure taken to remove pestsand diseases. This paper reports on the first trial conducted under farmers’condition on the performance of hot water treated suckers versus plants producedfrom corm fragments (CFP). Both techniques serve the purpose of planting pest(mainly nematode) and disease free propagules. Plantains were monitored for 50months after planting. Preflowering losses, mainly to death for unidentified reasonswere highest in CFP material. Uprooting and pseudostem break were not differentbetween CFP material and hot water and untreated suckers. Mean bunch mass washighest in CFP material. Due to the high plant losses of CFP material, bunch yield ofthe plant crop was lower than when conventional suckers were hot water treated.CFP material yield did not differ from that of traditionally prepared suckers. Rootnumber and root health in CFP plants were better than in both sucker treatments.None of these advantages was carried over to the first ratoon crop. CFP plants havea high potential to increase yields yet the weakness of high plant losses in thejuvenile phase needs to be overcome to make the technique adoptable. 2010-11 2018-01-16T12:03:42Z 2018-01-16T12:03:42Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90377 en Limited Access International Society for Horticultural Science Mekoa, C. & Hauser, S. (2008). Survival and yield of the plantain Ebang (Musa spp., AAB genome, False Horn) produced from corm fragment initiated plants and suckers after hot water treatment in Southern Cameroon. In IV International Symposium on Banana: International Conference on Banana and Plantain in Africa. Acta Horticulturae, 879, 527-535.
spellingShingle plant losses
plantain propagation technique
root health
Mekoa, C.
Hauser, S.
Survival and yield of the plantain Ebang (Musa spp., AAB genome, False Horn) produced from corm fragment initiated plants and suckers after hot water treatment in Southern Cameroon
title Survival and yield of the plantain Ebang (Musa spp., AAB genome, False Horn) produced from corm fragment initiated plants and suckers after hot water treatment in Southern Cameroon
title_full Survival and yield of the plantain Ebang (Musa spp., AAB genome, False Horn) produced from corm fragment initiated plants and suckers after hot water treatment in Southern Cameroon
title_fullStr Survival and yield of the plantain Ebang (Musa spp., AAB genome, False Horn) produced from corm fragment initiated plants and suckers after hot water treatment in Southern Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Survival and yield of the plantain Ebang (Musa spp., AAB genome, False Horn) produced from corm fragment initiated plants and suckers after hot water treatment in Southern Cameroon
title_short Survival and yield of the plantain Ebang (Musa spp., AAB genome, False Horn) produced from corm fragment initiated plants and suckers after hot water treatment in Southern Cameroon
title_sort survival and yield of the plantain ebang musa spp aab genome false horn produced from corm fragment initiated plants and suckers after hot water treatment in southern cameroon
topic plant losses
plantain propagation technique
root health
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90377
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