scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Alley cropping sequentially cropped maize and cowpea with leucaena on a sandy soil in Southern Nigeria.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The giant Leucaena (Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) de Wit) cultivar K-28 was studied on an Entisol (Psammentic Ustorthent) in Southern Nigeria and resulted in higher soil moisture retention, organic matter, exchangeable K, Ca, Mg, and also nitrate levels in the soil solution.
Abstract
The potential of alley cropping maize and cowpea with the giant Leucaena (Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) de Wit) cultivar K-28 was studied on an Entisol (Psammentic Ustorthent) in Southern Nigeria. In this trial the crops were grown in 4 m wide alleys formed by periodically pruned leucaena hedgerows. The effect of application of leucaena prunings, nitrogen fertilizer and tillage was studied. Despite the very intensive pruning regime (five prunings/year) for a six-year period, the leucaena hedgerows continue to produce substantial amounts of prunings, nitrogen yield and stakes. Application of nitrogen to the maize crop increased dry matter and nitrogen yield from the leucaena prunings. Although high nitrogen yield was obtained from the prunings, the application of low nitrogen rates was still needed for obtaining a high maize yield. Maize grain yield can be sustained at about 2.0 t/ha with continuous application of leucacna prunings only. Without application of leucaena prunings and nitrogen maize yield continued to decline with subsequent croppings. Cowpea grain yield was not affected either by leucaena prunings or by residual nitrogen. Tillage (rototilling) resulted in either higher or the same maize and cowpea yields as compared with no-tillage. Application of leucaena prunings resulted in higher soil moisture retention, organic matter, exchangeable K, Ca, Mg, and also nitrate levels in the soil solution. Leucaena and maize appear to extract soil moisture from different zones in the soil. Timely pruning of hedgerows is necessary to minimize shading.

read more

Citations
More filters
Book ChapterDOI

Science in agroforestry

TL;DR: Simultaneous agroforestry systems are more susceptible to competition than sequential ones, and new methodologies for reliably measuring complex below-ground interactions are being developed.
Book ChapterDOI

Conservation Tillage for Sustainable Agriculture: Tropics Versus Temperate Environments

TL;DR: In this article, the relation between conservation tillage and sustainable agriculture is discussed and appropriate conservation-tillage systems for different soils, crops, and agroecological region are identified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Agronomic modification of resource use and intercrop productivity

TL;DR: In order to sustain enhanced productivity from intercrops, it will become increasingly more important to substitute natural resources where feasible for purchased inputs, and a serious gap in knowledge on high input intercrop systems will hinder their rapid spread.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of biological nitrogen fixation in legume based cropping systems; a case study of West Africa farming systems

TL;DR: The Nbenefit of grain legumes to non-legumes is small compared to the level of N fertilizer use in more intensive cereal production systems but is nevertheless significant in the context of the low amounts of input in subsistence farming.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Alley cropping maize (Zea mays L.) and leucaena (Leucaena leucocephala Lam) in southern Nigeria

TL;DR: Though efficiency of N utilization from leucaena prunings was low, the maize-leucaena alley cropping system can be utilized as a low N-input system and has the potential for being developed as a stable alternative for the traditional bush fallow system.
Journal ArticleDOI

a Field Study with NITROGEN-15 of Soil and Fertilizer Nitrate Uptake and of Water Withdrawal by Spring Wheat

TL;DR: In this paper, a field experiment on a Udalf soil formed from loess, the authors studied the water uptake of spring wheat as a function of soil depth and of time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of fertilizer and weeding in no-tillage and tilled maize

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of fertilizer and weeding on the growth and yield of maize under no-tillage and tilled land preparations were investigated on Apomu soil and Egbeda soil in southern Nigeria.