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Multi-site time-trend analysis of soil fertility management effects on crop production in sub-Saharan West Africa

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Relation http://oar.icrisat.org/5462/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0014479702000236
 
Title Multi-site time-trend analysis of soil fertility management effects on crop production in sub-Saharan West Africa
 
Creator Buerkert, A
Piepho, H P
Bationo, A
 
Subject Soil Science
Fertilizer Appications
 
Description Soil fertility constraints to crop production have been recognized widely as a major obstacle to food security and agro-ecosystem sustainability in sub-Saharan West Africa. As such, they have led to a multitude of research projects and policy debates on how best they should be overcome. Conclusions, based on long-term multi-site experiments, are lacking with respect to a regional assessment of phosphorus and nitrogen fertilizer effects, surface mulched crop residues, and legume rotations on total dry matter of cereals in this region. A mixed model time-trend analysis was used to investigate the effects of four nitrogen (0, 50, 90 or 150 kg/ha) and phosphorus (no fertilizer, 13 kg/ha single superphosphate, 39 kg/ha Tahouca rock phosphate, an additional annual placement of rock phosphate at 4 kg/ha, and as NPK) rates, annually applied crop residue dry matter at 500 and 2000 kg ha-1, and cereal-legume rotation versus continuous cereal cropping on the total dry matter of cereals and legumes. The multi-factorial experiment was conducted over four years (1995-98) at eight locations (Banizoumbou, Sadore, Kara Bedji, Goberi, Gaya, Fada-Kouare, Koukombo and Kaboli), with annual rainfall ranging from 510 to 1300 mm, in Niger, Burkina Faso, and Togo. With the exception of phosphorus, treatment effects on legume growth were marginal. At most locations, except for typical Sudanian sites with very low base saturation and high rainfall, phosphorus effects on cereal total dry matter were much lower with rock phosphate than with soluble phosphorus, unless the rock phosphate was combined with an annual seed-placement of 4 kg ha-1 phosphorus. Across all other treatments, nitrogen effects were negligible at 500 mm annual rainfall but at 900 mm, the highest nitrogen rate led to total dry matter increases of up to 77% and, at 1300 mm, to 183%. Mulch-induced increases in cereal total dry matter were larger with lower base saturation, reaching 45% on typical acid sandy Sahelian soils. Legume rotation effects tended to increase over time but were strongly species-dependent
 
Publisher Cambridge University Press
 
Date 2002
 
Type Article
PeerReviewed
 
Format application/pdf
 
Language en
 
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Identifier http://oar.icrisat.org/5462/1/ExpAgric_38_2%20_163%20-%20183_2002.pdf
Buerkert, A and Piepho, H P and Bationo, A (2002) Multi-site time-trend analysis of soil fertility management effects on crop production in sub-Saharan West Africa. Experimental Agriculture, 38 (2). pp. 163-183. ISSN 0014-4797