Promoting integrated management practices for speargrass (Imperata cylindrica (L) Raeusch.) in soybean, cassava and yam in Nigeria

Speargrass is a serious weed in many farming systems of West Africa. Participatory research and extension approaches were used to promote farmer testing of alternative speargrass management options in yam, cassava and soybean in Nigeria. Treatments were paired plots with a farmers' control and at le...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chikoye, David, Ellis-Jones, J., Avav, T., Kormawa, P.M., Udensi, U.E., Tarawali, G., Nielsen, O.K.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92215
_version_ 1855541616836608000
author Chikoye, David
Ellis-Jones, J.
Avav, T.
Kormawa, P.M.
Udensi, U.E.
Tarawali, G.
Nielsen, O.K.
author_browse Avav, T.
Chikoye, David
Ellis-Jones, J.
Kormawa, P.M.
Nielsen, O.K.
Tarawali, G.
Udensi, U.E.
author_facet Chikoye, David
Ellis-Jones, J.
Avav, T.
Kormawa, P.M.
Udensi, U.E.
Tarawali, G.
Nielsen, O.K.
author_sort Chikoye, David
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Speargrass is a serious weed in many farming systems of West Africa. Participatory research and extension approaches were used to promote farmer testing of alternative speargrass management options in yam, cassava and soybean in Nigeria. Treatments were paired plots with a farmers' control and at least one improved control option. The farmers' practice consisted of slashing, burning and hoe weeding. Improved options were the use of glyphosate either alone or integrated with velvetbean. In the farmers' control, labour use was higher in yam and soybean than in cassava. In all crops, there was a 54 to 96% decrease in labour use as farmers switched from hoe weeding to chemical control. Including velvetbean in the improved management systems required an additional 45 person-hrha. Across all crops, chemical control reduced speargrass density, gave higher yields and gross benefits and had a lower cost of weed control than the farmer's control. Chemical control increased the net benefit over the farmers' control and gave higher benefit:cost ratios because of higher crop values and lower costs of weed control. Farmers preferred chemical control because of better crop performance and reduced labour use. The perceived high cost of herbicides was a disincentive for widespread adoption.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace92215
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2007
publishDateRange 2007
publishDateSort 2007
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace922152023-08-03T08:11:17Z Promoting integrated management practices for speargrass (Imperata cylindrica (L) Raeusch.) in soybean, cassava and yam in Nigeria Chikoye, David Ellis-Jones, J. Avav, T. Kormawa, P.M. Udensi, U.E. Tarawali, G. Nielsen, O.K. cover crop herbicide weed contro participatory approaches speargrass velvetbean chemical control food security herbicides poverty abiotic and biotic stresses Speargrass is a serious weed in many farming systems of West Africa. Participatory research and extension approaches were used to promote farmer testing of alternative speargrass management options in yam, cassava and soybean in Nigeria. Treatments were paired plots with a farmers' control and at least one improved control option. The farmers' practice consisted of slashing, burning and hoe weeding. Improved options were the use of glyphosate either alone or integrated with velvetbean. In the farmers' control, labour use was higher in yam and soybean than in cassava. In all crops, there was a 54 to 96% decrease in labour use as farmers switched from hoe weeding to chemical control. Including velvetbean in the improved management systems required an additional 45 person-hrha. Across all crops, chemical control reduced speargrass density, gave higher yields and gross benefits and had a lower cost of weed control than the farmer's control. Chemical control increased the net benefit over the farmers' control and gave higher benefit:cost ratios because of higher crop values and lower costs of weed control. Farmers preferred chemical control because of better crop performance and reduced labour use. The perceived high cost of herbicides was a disincentive for widespread adoption. 2007 2018-04-24T08:40:15Z 2018-04-24T08:40:15Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92215 en Limited Access Chikoye, D., Ellis-Jones, J., Avav, T., Kormawa, P.M., Udensi, U.E., Tarawali, G. & Nielsen, O.K. (2007). Promoting integrated management practices for speargrass (Imperata cylindrica (L.) Raeusch.) in soybean, cassava and yam in Nigeria. Journal of Food Agriculture and Environment, 5(3&4), 202-210.
spellingShingle cover crop
herbicide
weed contro
participatory approaches
speargrass
velvetbean
chemical control
food security
herbicides
poverty
abiotic and biotic stresses
Chikoye, David
Ellis-Jones, J.
Avav, T.
Kormawa, P.M.
Udensi, U.E.
Tarawali, G.
Nielsen, O.K.
Promoting integrated management practices for speargrass (Imperata cylindrica (L) Raeusch.) in soybean, cassava and yam in Nigeria
title Promoting integrated management practices for speargrass (Imperata cylindrica (L) Raeusch.) in soybean, cassava and yam in Nigeria
title_full Promoting integrated management practices for speargrass (Imperata cylindrica (L) Raeusch.) in soybean, cassava and yam in Nigeria
title_fullStr Promoting integrated management practices for speargrass (Imperata cylindrica (L) Raeusch.) in soybean, cassava and yam in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Promoting integrated management practices for speargrass (Imperata cylindrica (L) Raeusch.) in soybean, cassava and yam in Nigeria
title_short Promoting integrated management practices for speargrass (Imperata cylindrica (L) Raeusch.) in soybean, cassava and yam in Nigeria
title_sort promoting integrated management practices for speargrass imperata cylindrica l raeusch in soybean cassava and yam in nigeria
topic cover crop
herbicide
weed contro
participatory approaches
speargrass
velvetbean
chemical control
food security
herbicides
poverty
abiotic and biotic stresses
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92215
work_keys_str_mv AT chikoyedavid promotingintegratedmanagementpracticesforspeargrassimperatacylindricalraeuschinsoybeancassavaandyaminnigeria
AT ellisjonesj promotingintegratedmanagementpracticesforspeargrassimperatacylindricalraeuschinsoybeancassavaandyaminnigeria
AT avavt promotingintegratedmanagementpracticesforspeargrassimperatacylindricalraeuschinsoybeancassavaandyaminnigeria
AT kormawapm promotingintegratedmanagementpracticesforspeargrassimperatacylindricalraeuschinsoybeancassavaandyaminnigeria
AT udensiue promotingintegratedmanagementpracticesforspeargrassimperatacylindricalraeuschinsoybeancassavaandyaminnigeria
AT tarawalig promotingintegratedmanagementpracticesforspeargrassimperatacylindricalraeuschinsoybeancassavaandyaminnigeria
AT nielsenok promotingintegratedmanagementpracticesforspeargrassimperatacylindricalraeuschinsoybeancassavaandyaminnigeria