Effects of sole cropping, intercropping and rotation with legume trap-crops on striga control and maize grain yield in farmers' fields in the Guinea savannas

On-farm trials were conducted in 2001 to 2003 in the northern Guinea savanna of Nigeria to evaluate integrated Striga hermonthica control methods under farmer-managed conditions. These included intercropping a Striga-resistant maize variety with cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L.) and also cropping this m...

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Autores principales: Kureh, I., Kamara, A.Y.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Institute of Tropical Agriculture 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91207
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author Kureh, I.
Kamara, A.Y.
author_browse Kamara, A.Y.
Kureh, I.
author_facet Kureh, I.
Kamara, A.Y.
author_sort Kureh, I.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description On-farm trials were conducted in 2001 to 2003 in the northern Guinea savanna of Nigeria to evaluate integrated Striga hermonthica control methods under farmer-managed conditions. These included intercropping a Striga-resistant maize variety with cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L.) and also cropping this maize in rotation with legume trap-crops - soybean (Glycine max (L) Merr.) and cowpea. Intercropping Striga-tolerant maize vaeirty, Acr. 97 TZL Comp. 1-W, with cowpea or rotating it with the soybean cultivar TGX1448-2E) or the cowpea cultivar IT93K452-1 proved effective in reducing Striga incidence and infestation compared with three years of continuously cropped maize as control. Striga incidence was reduced by 73% in intercropped maize, 64% in maize after two years soybean, and by 68% in maize after two years of cowpea than in continuously cropped maize. However, maize grain yield was considerably reduced when intercropped with cowpea, probably due to competition from the cowpea crop. Maize grain yield was 28% higher after one year of soybean and 21% higher after one year of cowpea than in the continuously cropped maize. Maize grain yield was 85% higher after two years of soybean, and 66% higher after two years of cowpea than in the continuously cropped maize.
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spelling CGSpace912072023-02-15T06:36:35Z Effects of sole cropping, intercropping and rotation with legume trap-crops on striga control and maize grain yield in farmers' fields in the Guinea savannas Kureh, I. Kamara, A.Y. maize grain legumes intercropping crop rotation striga yield On-farm trials were conducted in 2001 to 2003 in the northern Guinea savanna of Nigeria to evaluate integrated Striga hermonthica control methods under farmer-managed conditions. These included intercropping a Striga-resistant maize variety with cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L.) and also cropping this maize in rotation with legume trap-crops - soybean (Glycine max (L) Merr.) and cowpea. Intercropping Striga-tolerant maize vaeirty, Acr. 97 TZL Comp. 1-W, with cowpea or rotating it with the soybean cultivar TGX1448-2E) or the cowpea cultivar IT93K452-1 proved effective in reducing Striga incidence and infestation compared with three years of continuously cropped maize as control. Striga incidence was reduced by 73% in intercropped maize, 64% in maize after two years soybean, and by 68% in maize after two years of cowpea than in continuously cropped maize. However, maize grain yield was considerably reduced when intercropped with cowpea, probably due to competition from the cowpea crop. Maize grain yield was 28% higher after one year of soybean and 21% higher after one year of cowpea than in the continuously cropped maize. Maize grain yield was 85% higher after two years of soybean, and 66% higher after two years of cowpea than in the continuously cropped maize. 2007 2018-02-28T15:31:52Z 2018-02-28T15:31:52Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91207 en Limited Access International Institute of Tropical Agriculture Kureh, I. & Kamara, A.Y. (2007). Effects of sole cropping, intercropping and rotation with legume trap-crops on Striga control and maize grain yield in farmers’ fields in the Northern Guinea Savanna. In Fifth biennial regional maize workshop: demand-driven technologies for sustainable maize production in West and Central Africa(pp. 169-179), 3-6 May, Cotonou, Benin.
spellingShingle maize
grain legumes
intercropping
crop rotation
striga
yield
Kureh, I.
Kamara, A.Y.
Effects of sole cropping, intercropping and rotation with legume trap-crops on striga control and maize grain yield in farmers' fields in the Guinea savannas
title Effects of sole cropping, intercropping and rotation with legume trap-crops on striga control and maize grain yield in farmers' fields in the Guinea savannas
title_full Effects of sole cropping, intercropping and rotation with legume trap-crops on striga control and maize grain yield in farmers' fields in the Guinea savannas
title_fullStr Effects of sole cropping, intercropping and rotation with legume trap-crops on striga control and maize grain yield in farmers' fields in the Guinea savannas
title_full_unstemmed Effects of sole cropping, intercropping and rotation with legume trap-crops on striga control and maize grain yield in farmers' fields in the Guinea savannas
title_short Effects of sole cropping, intercropping and rotation with legume trap-crops on striga control and maize grain yield in farmers' fields in the Guinea savannas
title_sort effects of sole cropping intercropping and rotation with legume trap crops on striga control and maize grain yield in farmers fields in the guinea savannas
topic maize
grain legumes
intercropping
crop rotation
striga
yield
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91207
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