Plantain production in an alley cropping system on an Ultisol in southeastern Nigeria

Plantain requires mulching for high yields and sustained productivity. Mulching is, however, labor-intensive and requires extra land for production. An experiment was conducted to determine the potential of alley cropping to supply in situ mulch for plantain production. Foliage from hedgerows of Dac...

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Autores principales: Ruhigwa, B.A., Gichuru, M., Swennen, Rony L., Tariah, N.M.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 1995
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97297
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author Ruhigwa, B.A.
Gichuru, M.
Swennen, Rony L.
Tariah, N.M.
author_browse Gichuru, M.
Ruhigwa, B.A.
Swennen, Rony L.
Tariah, N.M.
author_facet Ruhigwa, B.A.
Gichuru, M.
Swennen, Rony L.
Tariah, N.M.
author_sort Ruhigwa, B.A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Plantain requires mulching for high yields and sustained productivity. Mulching is, however, labor-intensive and requires extra land for production. An experiment was conducted to determine the potential of alley cropping to supply in situ mulch for plantain production. Foliage from hedgerows of Dactyladenia barteri, Alchornea cordifolia, Senna siamea and Gmelina arborea were compared with mulch from elephant (napier) grass (Pennisetum purpureum) carried into plots that served as the no-tree control. Plantain performed best with P. purpureum mulch because this mulch shortened its fruiting cycle and gave the highest yield (17.8 t ha-1). Among the hegderow species, D. barteri mulch produced the best results because the plantain produced 85% as much bunch yield as P. purpureum mulch. However, relative yields of plantain were 77,72 and 66% for A. cordifolia, S. siamea and G. arborea, respectively. Due to differences in cycle length, cumulative yield after two years was highest in P. purpureum (35.4 t ha-1). After two years, cumulative relative yields were 51 % or less for A. cordifolia, S. siamea and G. arborea in contrast with 66% for D. barteri. D. barteri mulch reduced diurnal soil temperature fluctuations and moisture depletion as well as P. purpureum mulch. High diurnal soil temperature fluctuations, high weed infestation and superficial rooting of the hedgerow species were observed with A. cordifolia, S. siamea and G. arborea treatments which resulted in poor performance of plantain. Although P. purpureum mulch gave the best results, its use is subject to serious constraints such as the high labor requirement for cutting, transportation, application and management in addition to the extra land required for its production which cannot be justified by the higher yield. D. barteri is therefore recommended as an in-situ mulch for plantain production in this acid Ultisol.
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spelling CGSpace972972023-09-25T09:16:55Z Plantain production in an alley cropping system on an Ultisol in southeastern Nigeria Ruhigwa, B.A. Gichuru, M. Swennen, Rony L. Tariah, N.M. alley cropping mulching trees plantains ultisols Plantain requires mulching for high yields and sustained productivity. Mulching is, however, labor-intensive and requires extra land for production. An experiment was conducted to determine the potential of alley cropping to supply in situ mulch for plantain production. Foliage from hedgerows of Dactyladenia barteri, Alchornea cordifolia, Senna siamea and Gmelina arborea were compared with mulch from elephant (napier) grass (Pennisetum purpureum) carried into plots that served as the no-tree control. Plantain performed best with P. purpureum mulch because this mulch shortened its fruiting cycle and gave the highest yield (17.8 t ha-1). Among the hegderow species, D. barteri mulch produced the best results because the plantain produced 85% as much bunch yield as P. purpureum mulch. However, relative yields of plantain were 77,72 and 66% for A. cordifolia, S. siamea and G. arborea, respectively. Due to differences in cycle length, cumulative yield after two years was highest in P. purpureum (35.4 t ha-1). After two years, cumulative relative yields were 51 % or less for A. cordifolia, S. siamea and G. arborea in contrast with 66% for D. barteri. D. barteri mulch reduced diurnal soil temperature fluctuations and moisture depletion as well as P. purpureum mulch. High diurnal soil temperature fluctuations, high weed infestation and superficial rooting of the hedgerow species were observed with A. cordifolia, S. siamea and G. arborea treatments which resulted in poor performance of plantain. Although P. purpureum mulch gave the best results, its use is subject to serious constraints such as the high labor requirement for cutting, transportation, application and management in addition to the extra land required for its production which cannot be justified by the higher yield. D. barteri is therefore recommended as an in-situ mulch for plantain production in this acid Ultisol. 1995 2018-09-14T07:35:43Z 2018-09-14T07:35:43Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97297 en Limited Access Ruhigwa, B.A., Gichuru, M., Swennen, R. & Tariah, N.M. (1995). Plantain production in an alley cropping system on an Ultisol in southeastern Nigeria, Alley farming research and development: Conference Proceedings of an International Conference on alley farming, Ibadan, Nigeria, 14-18 September, 1992. Ibadan, Nigeria: IITA, (p. 268-277).
spellingShingle alley cropping
mulching
trees
plantains
ultisols
Ruhigwa, B.A.
Gichuru, M.
Swennen, Rony L.
Tariah, N.M.
Plantain production in an alley cropping system on an Ultisol in southeastern Nigeria
title Plantain production in an alley cropping system on an Ultisol in southeastern Nigeria
title_full Plantain production in an alley cropping system on an Ultisol in southeastern Nigeria
title_fullStr Plantain production in an alley cropping system on an Ultisol in southeastern Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Plantain production in an alley cropping system on an Ultisol in southeastern Nigeria
title_short Plantain production in an alley cropping system on an Ultisol in southeastern Nigeria
title_sort plantain production in an alley cropping system on an ultisol in southeastern nigeria
topic alley cropping
mulching
trees
plantains
ultisols
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97297
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