Record Details

Coffee - cardamom, black pepper and mandarin mixed cropping system - a case study

DSpice at Indian Institute of Spices Research

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Field Value
 
Creator KORIKANTHIMATH, V S
MULGE, RAVINDRA
HEGDE, RAJENDRA
HOSMANI, M M
 
Date 2006-09-19T06:50:55Z
2006-09-19T06:50:55Z
1997-06
 
Identifier Journal of Spices and Aromatic Crops 6 (1) : 1-7 (1997)
0971-3328
http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/78
 
Description Experiments were conducted at Chettalli, a predominantly coffee growing area in Kodagu District (Karnataka, India) to study the yield potential of coffee (Coffea robusta), cardamom (Elettaria cardamomum), black pepper (Piper nigrum) and mandarin (Citrus reticulata) in a mixed cropping system. Dry yield of coffee was significantly higher when it was grown as mono crop (2163 kg/ha) compared to mixed crop (1568 kg/ha). Cardamom when introduced as a single hedge by trimming the side branches of alternate rows of coffee, recorded an yield of 204.83 kg/ha. Black pepper vines trained on live standards of shade trees yielded 1222.15 kg/ha. Mandarin was severely infested with greening disease and there was no appreciable yield. The study indicated the feasibility of introduction of high value crops like cardamom and black pepper as mixed crops for increasing the production and productivity of coffee plantations.
 
Format 398593 bytes
application/pdf
 
Language en
 
Publisher Indian Society for Spices
 
Subject black pepper
coffee
mandarin
cardamom
mixed cropping
 
Title Coffee - cardamom, black pepper and mandarin mixed cropping system - a case study
 
Type Article