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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Tillage, crop residue, legume rotation, and green manure effects on sorghum and millet yields in the semiarid tropics of Mali
Ist Teil von
  • Plant and soil, 2000-01, Vol.225 (1/2), p.141-151
Ort / Verlag
Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers
Erscheinungsjahr
2000
Quelle
2022 ECC(Springer)
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • Alternative soil management practices are needed in semi-arid West Africa to sustain soil fertility and cereal production while reducing the need for extended fallow periods and chemical fertilizers. An experiment was conducted at the Cinzana Station near Segou, Mali to assess the effects of tillage, crop residue incorporation and legume rotation on the growth and yield of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L. Moench) and pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum L.) for a period of eight years on a loamy sand and a loam soil. The following treatments were compared under tied ridging and the traditional open ridging: continuous cereal with crop residue removed, continuous cereal with crop residue incorporated, cereal in rotation with cowpea (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Waip.), cereal in rotation with sesbania (Sesbania rostrata Bremek. & Oberm.), and cereal in rotation with dolichos (Dolichos lablab L.). Legumes in rotation were incorporated as green manures except cowpea which was removed after each harvest. Tied ridging improved cereal grain yield from 1022 kg ha⁻¹ with open ridging to 1091 kg ha⁻¹ on the loamy sand and from 1554 kg ha⁻¹ to 1697 kg ha⁻¹ on the loam, when averaged across management regimes and years of cropping. Incorporation of cereal residue at the beginning of the rainy season every other year had only small and inconsistent effects on cereal yield. Rotation with cowpea increased cereal grain and stover yields by 18 and 25%, respectively, on the loamy sand, and by 23% and 27%, respectively, on the loam compared to continuous cereal, when averaged across tillage regimes and years. Sesbania and dolichos performed similarly as green manures on both soils. Incorporation of these legumes as green manure at the end of the rainy season increased cereal grain and stover yields by 37% and 49%, respectively, on the loamy sand, and by 27% and 30%, respectively, on the loam, compared to cereal monoculture without organic amendment, when averaged across tillage regimes and years. A significant linear increase in cereal yield was observed during the eight years of the study on the loam soil when sesbania and dolichos green manures were incorporated.

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