Weed seedbank response to planted fallow and tillage in southwest Nigeria

Planted fallows are an alternative to the unsustainable bush fallow for improved soil and weed management in the tropics. However, the interactive effects of planted fallows and tillage on the weed seedbank are not well documented in the tropical environment. The effect of fallow type and tillage on...

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Main Authors: Ekeleme, F., Chikoye, David, Akobundu, I.O.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96226
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author Ekeleme, F.
Chikoye, David
Akobundu, I.O.
author_browse Akobundu, I.O.
Chikoye, David
Ekeleme, F.
author_facet Ekeleme, F.
Chikoye, David
Akobundu, I.O.
author_sort Ekeleme, F.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Planted fallows are an alternative to the unsustainable bush fallow for improved soil and weed management in the tropics. However, the interactive effects of planted fallows and tillage on the weed seedbank are not well documented in the tropical environment. The effect of fallow type and tillage on the weed seedbank in the soil was assessed in 1995 and 1996 at Ibadan, southwest Nigeria. The planted fallow species consisted of a herbaceous legume (Pueraria phaseoloides) and three woody legumes (Acacia auriculiformis, Leucaena leucocephala, and Senna siamea). Natural bush fallow and continuous cassava/maize plots were controls. Tillage treatments were minimum tillage and mounding. Continuous maize/cassava plots had the largest weed seedbank in both years. After six years of continuous fallow, the weed seedbank was 86% lower in A. auriculiformis, 79% in P. phaseoloides, 68% in S. siamea, 53% in L. leucocephala, and 35% in natural bush fallow plots than in continuously cultivated plots. Compared to minimum tillage, mounding reduced the seedbank by 47% in 1995 and 66% in 1996. Redundancy analysis showed that tillage contributed significantly to the variance in species composition. Euphorbia hyssopifolia, E. heterophylla, and Cynodon dactylon showed no preference in terms of tillage. Perennial and annual grasses (Digitaria horizontalis, Eleusine indica, Paspalum orbiculare, Cynodon dactylon) with Cyathula prostrata and Desmodium scorpiurus, an annual and perennial broadleaf, respectively, were most abundant in the seedbank of continuously cultivated plots. There were more annual broadleaf weeds in the seedbank of planted fallow plots than in the control plots. Species diversity of the seedbank was greatest in plots under minimum tillage. Mounding as a seedbed preparation method, especially within the improved fallow system, could reduce the high weed pressure experienced by smallholder farmers in southwest Nigeria.
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spelling CGSpace962262025-11-11T10:17:13Z Weed seedbank response to planted fallow and tillage in southwest Nigeria Ekeleme, F. Chikoye, David Akobundu, I.O. bush fallowing minimum tillage fallow weeds cassava maize Planted fallows are an alternative to the unsustainable bush fallow for improved soil and weed management in the tropics. However, the interactive effects of planted fallows and tillage on the weed seedbank are not well documented in the tropical environment. The effect of fallow type and tillage on the weed seedbank in the soil was assessed in 1995 and 1996 at Ibadan, southwest Nigeria. The planted fallow species consisted of a herbaceous legume (Pueraria phaseoloides) and three woody legumes (Acacia auriculiformis, Leucaena leucocephala, and Senna siamea). Natural bush fallow and continuous cassava/maize plots were controls. Tillage treatments were minimum tillage and mounding. Continuous maize/cassava plots had the largest weed seedbank in both years. After six years of continuous fallow, the weed seedbank was 86% lower in A. auriculiformis, 79% in P. phaseoloides, 68% in S. siamea, 53% in L. leucocephala, and 35% in natural bush fallow plots than in continuously cultivated plots. Compared to minimum tillage, mounding reduced the seedbank by 47% in 1995 and 66% in 1996. Redundancy analysis showed that tillage contributed significantly to the variance in species composition. Euphorbia hyssopifolia, E. heterophylla, and Cynodon dactylon showed no preference in terms of tillage. Perennial and annual grasses (Digitaria horizontalis, Eleusine indica, Paspalum orbiculare, Cynodon dactylon) with Cyathula prostrata and Desmodium scorpiurus, an annual and perennial broadleaf, respectively, were most abundant in the seedbank of continuously cultivated plots. There were more annual broadleaf weeds in the seedbank of planted fallow plots than in the control plots. Species diversity of the seedbank was greatest in plots under minimum tillage. Mounding as a seedbed preparation method, especially within the improved fallow system, could reduce the high weed pressure experienced by smallholder farmers in southwest Nigeria. 2005-06 2018-07-23T14:19:37Z 2018-07-23T14:19:37Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96226 en Limited Access application/pdf Springer Ekeleme, F., Chikoye, D. & Akobundu, I.O. (2005). Weed seedbank response to planted fallow and tillage in southwest Nigeria. Agroforestry Systems, 63(3), 299-306.
spellingShingle bush fallowing
minimum tillage
fallow
weeds
cassava
maize
Ekeleme, F.
Chikoye, David
Akobundu, I.O.
Weed seedbank response to planted fallow and tillage in southwest Nigeria
title Weed seedbank response to planted fallow and tillage in southwest Nigeria
title_full Weed seedbank response to planted fallow and tillage in southwest Nigeria
title_fullStr Weed seedbank response to planted fallow and tillage in southwest Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Weed seedbank response to planted fallow and tillage in southwest Nigeria
title_short Weed seedbank response to planted fallow and tillage in southwest Nigeria
title_sort weed seedbank response to planted fallow and tillage in southwest nigeria
topic bush fallowing
minimum tillage
fallow
weeds
cassava
maize
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96226
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AT chikoyedavid weedseedbankresponsetoplantedfallowandtillageinsouthwestnigeria
AT akobunduio weedseedbankresponsetoplantedfallowandtillageinsouthwestnigeria