Citation Information

  • Title : Strategic phosphorus application in legume-cereal rotations increases land productivity and profitability in western Kenya.
  • Source : Experimental Agriculture
  • Publisher : Cambridge University Press
  • Volume : 46
  • Issue : 1
  • Pages : 35-52
  • Year : 2010
  • DOI : 10.1017/S0014479
  • ISBN : 10.1017/S0014479709990810
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Chianu, J.
    • Kimetu, J.
    • Waswa, B.
    • Vanlauwe, B.
    • Kihara, J.
    • Bationo, A.
  • Climates: Tropical savannah (Aw).
  • Cropping Systems: Cereal crops. Continuous cropping. Maize. Crop-pasture rotations. Legumes. Soybean.
  • Countries:

Summary

Many food production systems in sub-Saharan Africa are constrained by phosphorus (P).We hypothesized that within legume-cereal rotation systems: targeting P to the legume phase leads to higher system productivity, and that use of grain legumes leads to better economic returns than use of herbaceous legumes. Four P application regimes: (i) no P, (ii) P applied every season, (iii) P applied in season 1 only and (iv) P applied in season 2 only were tested for four seasons in three cropping systems (continuous maize, mucuna-maize rotation and soybean-maize rotation) in a split plot experiment set up in Nyabeda, western Kenya. Treatments where P was applied were better than no P treatments.While continuous cereal systems showed the need for application of P every second season, rotation systems involvingmucuna and soyabean indicated that application in one out of three seasons could be sufficient. Nitrogen fertilizer equivalence was 52 to >90 kg N ha -1 for soyabean and 37 to >90 kg N ha -1 for mucuna, depending on P fertilization and season. Analysis of marginal rates of return (MRR) showed that soybean-maize rotation with one application of P was the most economically viable option, with an MRR of at least 147% compared to other non-dominated options.

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