Integrated soil management for the savanna zone of W. Africa: legume rotation and fertilizer N

TR Number
Date
1999
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Science+Business Media B.V., Formerly Kluwer Academic Publishers B.V.
Abstract

Integrated soil management with leguminous cover crops was studied at two sites in the northern Guinea savanna zone of northern Nigeria, Kaduna (190 day growing season) and Bauchi (150 days). One-year planted fallows of mucuna, lablab, and crotalaria were compared with natural grass fallow and cowpea controls. All treatments were followed by a maize test crop in the second year with 0, 30, or 60 kg N/ha as urea. Above ground legume residues were not incorporated into the soil and most residues were burned early in the dry season at the Kaduna site. Legume rotation increased soil total N, maize growth in greenhouse pots, and dry matter and N accumulation of maize. Response of maize grain yield to 30 kg N ha1 as urea was highly significant at both sites and much greater than the response to legume rotation. The mean N fertilizer replacement value from legume rotation was 14 kg N/ha at Kaduna and 6 kg N/ha at Bauchi. W ith no N applied to the maize test crop, maize grain yield following legume fallow was 365 kg/ha higher than natural fallow at Bauchi and 235 kg/ha higher at Kaduna. The benefit of specific legume fallows to subsequent maize was mostly related to above ground N of the previous legume at Bauchi, where residues were protected from fire and grazing. At Kaduna, where fallow vegetation was burned, maize yield was related to estimated below ground N. The results show that legume rotation alone results in small maize yield increases in the dry savanna zone.

Description
Keywords
Soil nutrients, Green manure crops, Soil management, Arid zones, Soil, Fertilization, Cover crops, Savannah, N fertilizer, Maize, Cowpeas, N fertilizer replacement value, Integrated soil management, Field Scale
Citation
Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems 55(2): 95-105