Contribution of soil quality to banana yield problems and its relation with other banana yield loss factors

In Uganda, highland banana yields (5-30 t ha-1yr-1) are low in comparison to potential yields (70 t ha-1yr-1) due to high pest and disease pressure, soil fertility decline, and poor management. Although it is generally accepted that soil exhaustion is a major cause of low and declining yields, there...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Asten, Piet J.A. van, Gold, Cliford S., Wendt, J., Waele, D. de, Okech, S.H., Ssali, H., Tushemereirwe, Wilberforce K.
Formato: Conference Proceedings
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91504
_version_ 1855533721441009664
author Asten, Piet J.A. van
Gold, Cliford S.
Wendt, J.
Waele, D. de
Okech, S.H.
Ssali, H.
Tushemereirwe, Wilberforce K.
author_browse Asten, Piet J.A. van
Gold, Cliford S.
Okech, S.H.
Ssali, H.
Tushemereirwe, Wilberforce K.
Waele, D. de
Wendt, J.
author_facet Asten, Piet J.A. van
Gold, Cliford S.
Wendt, J.
Waele, D. de
Okech, S.H.
Ssali, H.
Tushemereirwe, Wilberforce K.
author_sort Asten, Piet J.A. van
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In Uganda, highland banana yields (5-30 t ha-1yr-1) are low in comparison to potential yields (70 t ha-1yr-1) due to high pest and disease pressure, soil fertility decline, and poor management. Although it is generally accepted that soil exhaustion is a major cause of low and declining yields, there are almost no data to demonstrate this relationship. Most studies show that banana soils are relatively fertile and often contain sufficient nutrients for optimum growth. Nonetheless, K, N and Mg deficiencies are commonly detected in fertilizer trials and banana foliar samples. The growing commercialization of banana increases the export of plant nutrients from the farms to the urban centers. Contrary to commercial production in most parts of the world, Ugandan banana growers do not use chemical fertilizers to replenish soil nutrient stocks. Instead, they rely on organic supplements, causing further soil fertility decline of annual cropped fields and grassland. Although nutrient losses can be minimized with improved organic matter management, sustaining long-term soil fertility without the use of external inputs seems unlikely. Thereis evidence showing that pest and disease pressure are closely related to soil fertility and plant nutrient uptake. However, the functional relationships between pests, diseases and soil fertility problems are yet to be resolved. When developing improved crop management options, it is necessary to address pest, disease and soil problems in an integrated way.
format Conference Proceedings
id CGSpace91504
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2005
publishDateRange 2005
publishDateSort 2005
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace915042024-01-17T12:58:34Z Contribution of soil quality to banana yield problems and its relation with other banana yield loss factors Asten, Piet J.A. van Gold, Cliford S. Wendt, J. Waele, D. de Okech, S.H. Ssali, H. Tushemereirwe, Wilberforce K. soil fertility diseases nutrient pests bananas fertilizers markets In Uganda, highland banana yields (5-30 t ha-1yr-1) are low in comparison to potential yields (70 t ha-1yr-1) due to high pest and disease pressure, soil fertility decline, and poor management. Although it is generally accepted that soil exhaustion is a major cause of low and declining yields, there are almost no data to demonstrate this relationship. Most studies show that banana soils are relatively fertile and often contain sufficient nutrients for optimum growth. Nonetheless, K, N and Mg deficiencies are commonly detected in fertilizer trials and banana foliar samples. The growing commercialization of banana increases the export of plant nutrients from the farms to the urban centers. Contrary to commercial production in most parts of the world, Ugandan banana growers do not use chemical fertilizers to replenish soil nutrient stocks. Instead, they rely on organic supplements, causing further soil fertility decline of annual cropped fields and grassland. Although nutrient losses can be minimized with improved organic matter management, sustaining long-term soil fertility without the use of external inputs seems unlikely. Thereis evidence showing that pest and disease pressure are closely related to soil fertility and plant nutrient uptake. However, the functional relationships between pests, diseases and soil fertility problems are yet to be resolved. When developing improved crop management options, it is necessary to address pest, disease and soil problems in an integrated way. 2005 2018-03-07T11:26:06Z 2018-03-07T11:26:06Z Conference Proceedings https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91504 en Limited Access Van Asten, P., Gold, C.S., Wendt, J., De Waele, D., Okech, S.H., Ssali, H. & Tushmereirwe, W. (2004). The contribution of soil quality to banana yield problems and its relation with other banana yield loss factors. Proceedings of the workshop on Farmer-participatory testing of IPM options for sustainable banana production in Eastern Africa, (p. 100-115), 8-9 December, Montpellier: International Plant Genetic Resources Institute.
spellingShingle soil fertility
diseases
nutrient
pests
bananas
fertilizers
markets
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Gold, Cliford S.
Wendt, J.
Waele, D. de
Okech, S.H.
Ssali, H.
Tushemereirwe, Wilberforce K.
Contribution of soil quality to banana yield problems and its relation with other banana yield loss factors
title Contribution of soil quality to banana yield problems and its relation with other banana yield loss factors
title_full Contribution of soil quality to banana yield problems and its relation with other banana yield loss factors
title_fullStr Contribution of soil quality to banana yield problems and its relation with other banana yield loss factors
title_full_unstemmed Contribution of soil quality to banana yield problems and its relation with other banana yield loss factors
title_short Contribution of soil quality to banana yield problems and its relation with other banana yield loss factors
title_sort contribution of soil quality to banana yield problems and its relation with other banana yield loss factors
topic soil fertility
diseases
nutrient
pests
bananas
fertilizers
markets
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91504
work_keys_str_mv AT astenpietjavan contributionofsoilqualitytobananayieldproblemsanditsrelationwithotherbananayieldlossfactors
AT goldclifords contributionofsoilqualitytobananayieldproblemsanditsrelationwithotherbananayieldlossfactors
AT wendtj contributionofsoilqualitytobananayieldproblemsanditsrelationwithotherbananayieldlossfactors
AT waeledde contributionofsoilqualitytobananayieldproblemsanditsrelationwithotherbananayieldlossfactors
AT okechsh contributionofsoilqualitytobananayieldproblemsanditsrelationwithotherbananayieldlossfactors
AT ssalih contributionofsoilqualitytobananayieldproblemsanditsrelationwithotherbananayieldlossfactors
AT tushemereirwewilberforcek contributionofsoilqualitytobananayieldproblemsanditsrelationwithotherbananayieldlossfactors