Sustainable yam production in Ghana The nonstaking option

A trial was conducted on-station with farmer participation at Fumesua (Forest zone), Wenchi (Forest-Savannah transition zone) and Bodwease (Coastal Savannah zone) from 2000 to 2003 and on-farm during 2002-2003. Two factors, staking and species, with two levels each were assessed using the Augmented...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Otoo, E., Anchirinah, V.M., Ennin, S.A., Asiedu, Robert
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90919
_version_ 1855531339668783104
author Otoo, E.
Anchirinah, V.M.
Ennin, S.A.
Asiedu, Robert
author_browse Anchirinah, V.M.
Asiedu, Robert
Ennin, S.A.
Otoo, E.
author_facet Otoo, E.
Anchirinah, V.M.
Ennin, S.A.
Asiedu, Robert
author_sort Otoo, E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A trial was conducted on-station with farmer participation at Fumesua (Forest zone), Wenchi (Forest-Savannah transition zone) and Bodwease (Coastal Savannah zone) from 2000 to 2003 and on-farm during 2002-2003. Two factors, staking and species, with two levels each were assessed using the Augmented RCB design. The objective of this study was to identify genotypes capable of producing high and stable yields under staking and non-staking condition. No significant differences (P>0.05) were observed in disease severity, frequency of hand weeding and yield of D. alata genotypes. Among the D. rotundata genotypes, leaf spot severity was more severe on non-staked genotypes except in TDr95/19177 where no significant differences were observed between the staked and non-staked genotypes. Tuber yield of the genotypes were significantly increased by staking. In Punjo the increase in yield of staked over non-staked plants ranged between 51.3 and 56.5%. Similarly, the yield of non-staked Dorban was increased by staking by 48.1-55.9% and Tela by 44.9-47.6%. Non-staked TDr95/19177 was technically and economically the more efficient system for production followed both staked and non-staked Punjo, Dente and Tela. Generally, cost of yam production was greater in the coastal savannah than the forest and the forest-savannah transition, due to the largest cost of labour and staking.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace90919
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2008
publishDateRange 2008
publishDateSort 2008
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace909192023-06-12T17:30:05Z Sustainable yam production in Ghana The nonstaking option Otoo, E. Anchirinah, V.M. Ennin, S.A. Asiedu, Robert staking sustainable yams genotypes photosynthetic efficiency A trial was conducted on-station with farmer participation at Fumesua (Forest zone), Wenchi (Forest-Savannah transition zone) and Bodwease (Coastal Savannah zone) from 2000 to 2003 and on-farm during 2002-2003. Two factors, staking and species, with two levels each were assessed using the Augmented RCB design. The objective of this study was to identify genotypes capable of producing high and stable yields under staking and non-staking condition. No significant differences (P>0.05) were observed in disease severity, frequency of hand weeding and yield of D. alata genotypes. Among the D. rotundata genotypes, leaf spot severity was more severe on non-staked genotypes except in TDr95/19177 where no significant differences were observed between the staked and non-staked genotypes. Tuber yield of the genotypes were significantly increased by staking. In Punjo the increase in yield of staked over non-staked plants ranged between 51.3 and 56.5%. Similarly, the yield of non-staked Dorban was increased by staking by 48.1-55.9% and Tela by 44.9-47.6%. Non-staked TDr95/19177 was technically and economically the more efficient system for production followed both staked and non-staked Punjo, Dente and Tela. Generally, cost of yam production was greater in the coastal savannah than the forest and the forest-savannah transition, due to the largest cost of labour and staking. 2008 2018-02-06T12:15:23Z 2018-02-06T12:15:23Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90919 en Limited Access Otoo, E., Anchirinah, V.M., Ennin, S.A. & Asiedu, R. (2008). Sustainable yam production in Ghana-The non-staking option. Journal of Food, Agriculture & Environment, 6(3-4), 391-396.
spellingShingle staking
sustainable
yams
genotypes
photosynthetic efficiency
Otoo, E.
Anchirinah, V.M.
Ennin, S.A.
Asiedu, Robert
Sustainable yam production in Ghana The nonstaking option
title Sustainable yam production in Ghana The nonstaking option
title_full Sustainable yam production in Ghana The nonstaking option
title_fullStr Sustainable yam production in Ghana The nonstaking option
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable yam production in Ghana The nonstaking option
title_short Sustainable yam production in Ghana The nonstaking option
title_sort sustainable yam production in ghana the nonstaking option
topic staking
sustainable
yams
genotypes
photosynthetic efficiency
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90919
work_keys_str_mv AT otooe sustainableyamproductioninghanathenonstakingoption
AT anchirinahvm sustainableyamproductioninghanathenonstakingoption
AT enninsa sustainableyamproductioninghanathenonstakingoption
AT asiedurobert sustainableyamproductioninghanathenonstakingoption