Effect of weed competition on upland rice production in north-eastern Nigeria

Rice production by smallholder farmers in the savannas of Nigeria is constrained by weed competition. A field study was conducted to assess the effect of weed competition on the performance of upland rice varieties in 2005 and 2006 in the northern Guinea and Sudan savannas of Nigeria. The experiment...

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Main Authors: Ekeleme, F., Kamara, A.Y., Oikeh, S.O., Chikoye, David, Omoigui, L.O.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: African Crop Science Society 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90616
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author Ekeleme, F.
Kamara, A.Y.
Oikeh, S.O.
Chikoye, David
Omoigui, L.O.
author_browse Chikoye, David
Ekeleme, F.
Kamara, A.Y.
Oikeh, S.O.
Omoigui, L.O.
author_facet Ekeleme, F.
Kamara, A.Y.
Oikeh, S.O.
Chikoye, David
Omoigui, L.O.
author_sort Ekeleme, F.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Rice production by smallholder farmers in the savannas of Nigeria is constrained by weed competition. A field study was conducted to assess the effect of weed competition on the performance of upland rice varieties in 2005 and 2006 in the northern Guinea and Sudan savannas of Nigeria. The experiment was set up as a split plot in randomized complete block design. One hoe weeding at 3 weeks and two hoe-weeding regimes at 3 and 6 weeks after planting and a weedy plot were the main plot treatments. Five rice varieties CG14 (Oryza glaberima), WAB56-104 (O. sativa, tropical japonica, type), NERICA1, NERICA2 and NERICA4 (New Rice for Africa) constituted the subplot treatments. In the weedy plot, grain yield did not differ significantly between varieties. Grain yield in all varieties was significantly depressed by over 86% in the weedy plot compared with plots that were hoe-weeded once or twice. Grain yield, number of spikelets plant-1 and days to flowering, differed substantially in plots that were hoe-weeded once or twice. Across locations and varieties, grain yield were 4.8 and 6.7 times higher in plots weeded once or twice, respectively than in the weedy plots. Weed biomass was negatively correlated with grain yield (r=-0.70; P=<.0001), number of spikelets plant-1 (r=-0.40;; P=0.0060) and plant height (r=-0.41; P=0.0049). Averaged over locations, NERICA 4 produced grain yield that was significantly higher than other varieties. Our result suggests that two hoe-weedings are needed for optimum grain yield of the rice varieties.
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spelling CGSpace906162023-08-03T08:11:17Z Effect of weed competition on upland rice production in north-eastern Nigeria Ekeleme, F. Kamara, A.Y. Oikeh, S.O. Chikoye, David Omoigui, L.O. weed competition biomass weeding rice smallholders yield Rice production by smallholder farmers in the savannas of Nigeria is constrained by weed competition. A field study was conducted to assess the effect of weed competition on the performance of upland rice varieties in 2005 and 2006 in the northern Guinea and Sudan savannas of Nigeria. The experiment was set up as a split plot in randomized complete block design. One hoe weeding at 3 weeks and two hoe-weeding regimes at 3 and 6 weeks after planting and a weedy plot were the main plot treatments. Five rice varieties CG14 (Oryza glaberima), WAB56-104 (O. sativa, tropical japonica, type), NERICA1, NERICA2 and NERICA4 (New Rice for Africa) constituted the subplot treatments. In the weedy plot, grain yield did not differ significantly between varieties. Grain yield in all varieties was significantly depressed by over 86% in the weedy plot compared with plots that were hoe-weeded once or twice. Grain yield, number of spikelets plant-1 and days to flowering, differed substantially in plots that were hoe-weeded once or twice. Across locations and varieties, grain yield were 4.8 and 6.7 times higher in plots weeded once or twice, respectively than in the weedy plots. Weed biomass was negatively correlated with grain yield (r=-0.70; P=<.0001), number of spikelets plant-1 (r=-0.40;; P=0.0060) and plant height (r=-0.41; P=0.0049). Averaged over locations, NERICA 4 produced grain yield that was significantly higher than other varieties. Our result suggests that two hoe-weedings are needed for optimum grain yield of the rice varieties. 2007 2018-01-29T10:26:58Z 2018-01-29T10:26:58Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90616 en Limited Access African Crop Science Society Ekeleme, F., Kamara, A.Y., Oikeh, S.O., Chikoye, D. & Omoigui, L.O. (2007). Effect of weed competition on upland rice production in northeastern Nigeria. In 8th African Crop Science Society Conference, (pp. 61-65), 27-31 October, El-Minia, African Crop Science Society.
spellingShingle weed competition
biomass
weeding
rice
smallholders
yield
Ekeleme, F.
Kamara, A.Y.
Oikeh, S.O.
Chikoye, David
Omoigui, L.O.
Effect of weed competition on upland rice production in north-eastern Nigeria
title Effect of weed competition on upland rice production in north-eastern Nigeria
title_full Effect of weed competition on upland rice production in north-eastern Nigeria
title_fullStr Effect of weed competition on upland rice production in north-eastern Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Effect of weed competition on upland rice production in north-eastern Nigeria
title_short Effect of weed competition on upland rice production in north-eastern Nigeria
title_sort effect of weed competition on upland rice production in north eastern nigeria
topic weed competition
biomass
weeding
rice
smallholders
yield
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90616
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