• Authors:
    • Horwath, W.
    • Kallenbach, C.
    • Assa, J.
    • Burger, M.
  • Year: 2009
  • Authors:
    • Smith, R.
    • Cahn, M.
  • Year: 2009
  • Authors:
    • Animesh, S.
  • Source: Journal of Bamboo and Rattan
  • Volume: 8
  • Issue: 1/2
  • Year: 2009
  • Summary: The feasibility of cultivation of winter vegetables under bamboo was assessed on the basis of their growth and yield. Recently Dendrocalamus asper, an edible and exotic bamboo species has been introduced in India. In the present study four-years-old plantation of D. asper raised through tissue culture was intercropped with potato ( Solanum tuberosum), tomato ( Lycopersicon esculentum) and pea ( Pisum sativum). Vegetable crops showed variable performance under bamboo as compared to control. Among three winter vegetable crops, pea was found most compatible with D. asper.
  • Authors:
    • Balasubramanian, V.
    • Kumar, A.
    • Prabhu, M.
    • Jagadeesan, R.
  • Source: Asian Journal of Horticulture
  • Volume: 4
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 2009
  • Summary: This review discusses the various cropping systems (multiple cropping, intercropping and cover cropping) that are successfully adopted for some tropical vegetables in India, including a few tuber vegetables. The role of cropping systems in crop protection (specifically the management of diamond back moth [ Plutella xylostella] in cabbage using collard as a trap crop, use of maize as an intercrop to control a viral disease of pepper, reduction of the incidence of bacterial wilt caused by Pseudomonas solanacearum [ Ralstonia solanacearum] in tomato by intercropping, and use of French marigold [ Tagetes patula] as a trap crop for the control of Meloidogyne incognita on potato) is briefly discussed.
  • Authors:
    • Ratsch, R.
    • Taraken, I.
  • Source: ACIAR Technical Reports Series
  • Issue: 71
  • Year: 2009
  • Summary: This paper explains the concept of composted mounding, which is used to cultivate sweetpotato/kaukau ( Ipomoea batatas) in many locations in Enga province and parts of Southern Highlands and Western Highlands provinces of Papua New Guinea (PNG). It draws both from published literature and recent findings on sweetpotato cultivation in the PNG highlands. The practice of composted mounding allows permanent land use and intercropping, and facilitates successive multiple harvests of sweetpotato tubers and other vegetables. It counteracts the risks of frosts and soil-borne pests and diseases, and reduces soil erosion. It offsets the inherent soil-fertility problems associated with the dominant volcanic ash soils in the mounding zone of the PNG highlands. The method utilises locally available organic materials such as garden debris, weeds, grasses and farmyard manure as compost. Numerous agronomic trials have been conducted to evaluate the effects of composted mounding on sweetpotato yield. However, further research is needed on the decomposition process to assess the beneficial effects of mounding in terms of reduced risk of frost, and pest and disease damage, and to evaluate the benefits of using ever-greater rates of compost in the light of the extra costs of collecting the compost material.
  • Authors:
    • Jorge, R. F.
    • Cora, J. E.
    • Martins, M. dos R.
    • Marcelo, A. V.
  • Source: Soil & Tillage Research
  • Volume: 104
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 2009
  • Summary: The adaptation of no-tillage system in tropical regions depends on the suitable choice of summer and winter crops which should contribute to improvement of soil properties. The aim of the present study was to determine the effect of crop sequences on soil aggregation and contents of organic C and polysaccharides in aggregates of a Rhodic Eutrudox under no-tillage. The treatments consisted of the combination of four summer crop sequences and seven winter crop sequences. The summer crop sequences were: maize monocrop ( Zea mays L.) (MM); soybean monocrop ( Glycine max (L.) Merrill) (SS); crop sequence of soybean/maize/soybean/maize (SM); crop sequence of rice ( Oryza sativa L.)/bean ( Phaseolus vulgaris L.)/cotton ( Gossypium hirsutum L.)/bean (RB). The winter crops were: maize, sunflower ( Helianthus annuus L.), radish ( Raphanus sativus L.), pearl millet ( Pennisetum americanum (L.) Leeke), pigeon pea ( Cajanus cajan (L.) Millsp), grain sorghum ( Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) and sunn hemp ( Crotalaria juncea L.). The highest total organic C, total polysaccharides and dilute acid-extracted polysaccharides contents were found in 2.00-1.00 mm water-stable aggregates and the lowest contents were found in
  • Authors:
    • Monteiro, J. E. B. A.
  • Source: Agrometeorologia dos cultivos: o fator meteorológico na produção agrícola
  • Year: 2009
  • Summary: This book brings together a broad base of information on 32 major Brazilian agricultural crops and their relations with climate. The focus of the book is not on the methodologies and applications of agrometeorology per se, but rather restricts its focus to crops and traits that determine yield as a function of the environment. The crops included are rice, castor oil, sunflowers, pineapples, soyabeans, triticale, maize, potatoes, barley, peanuts, oats, onions, canola, wheat, cotton, beans, sugarcane, Pinus, black wattle ( Acacia mearnsii), tropical and temperate grapes, coconuts, citrus, bananas, sisal, cocoa, coffee, apples, Jatropha, Eucalyptus and the fodder plants Cynodon, Brachiaria and Panicum. The contents of the book are divided into three main parts, I. Introduction, II. Temporary crops and III. Permanent crops, with each chapter within parts II and III dedicated to a particular crop, and covering: (1) the main features of farming and phenology; (2) agrometeorological productivity constraints - water availability, temperature, solar radiation, photoperiod and wind; and (3) adverse events - hail and rainstorms, droughts and dry spells, winds and gales, frost, and too much rain and over-prolonged drought. The book was organized by the National Institute of Meteorology and had the collaboration of 105 researchers from 37 Brazilian institutions (federal and state), research centres, institutes and universities.
  • Authors:
    • Sim, R.
    • Maley, S.
    • Fletcher, A.
    • Ruiter, J. M. de
    • George, M.
    • de Ruiter, J. M.
  • Source: Proceedings of the New Zealand Grassland Association
  • Volume: 71
  • Year: 2009
  • Summary: Dairy industry strategies have demanded feeding systems with high productivity and high quality. A 45 t DM/ha annual target for feed production was addressed. Six crop sequence treatments were established in large plots (40*12 m) at Lincoln, Canterbury, in the first year of a 2-year experiment to determine practical upper limits for yield. Summer crops included maize, kale and whole crop barley and these were followed by combinations of winter crops (oats, Italian ryegrass, forage rape, tick beans and triticale). Crops were grown with minimal transition time to reduce potential yield losses, and with optimum nitrogen and irrigation management. Highest plot yield in the first annual crop cycle was 11.9 t DM/ha short of the 45 t DM/ha target. Best productivity was with a maize - triticale+tick bean (32.5 t DM/ha) sequence followed by maize - wheat (30.0 t DM/ha), barley - oats+Italian ryegrass (28.1 t DM/ha) and kale - triticale+tick bean (26.1 t DM/ha). Fertiliser management, crop water use in high input cropping systems are discussed together with practical issues around handling crops with large accumulated biomass.
  • Authors:
    • Gao, L.
    • Chen, Q.
    • Liu, J.
    • Zhang, X.
    • Tian, Y.
  • Source: Scientia Horticulturae
  • Volume: 123
  • Issue: 2
  • Year: 2009
  • Summary: The increased use of rotation, grafting, and soil sterilization has been documented to increase crop yield in intensive vegetable production systems in China. It is believed that these practices can promote changes in the rhizosphere that enhance early growth of plants. A 2-year greenhouse experiment on tomato double-cropping systems was conducted to investigate the effects of different agricultural treatments on microbial properties of rhizosphere soils and tomato fruit yield. The treatments included planting of welsh onion as a cover crop in the summer fallow (SF) period (CW), rotating vegetable chrysanthemum and tomato (CT), planting graft-tomato instead of auto-root tomato (GT), sterilizing soil with calcium cyanamide in the SF period (TC), and fallowing in the SF period (Control). Microbial population was analyzed by dilution plating. In general, microbial populations were higher in CT, CT and TC than in control. Fungal population was higher in TC whereas a high number of bacteria were found in CT. Soil microbial biomass C and N, total microbial population, organic C and total N showed significant positive correlations (P
  • Authors:
    • Zudilin, S. N.
  • Source: Kormoproizvodstvo
  • Issue: 2
  • Year: 2009
  • Summary: Productivity of fodder crop rotation was studied in the Samara Region, Russia in 1993-2004. The fodder crop rotation consisted of 7 following combinations: (1) rape and radish; (2) winter wheat; (3) pea; (4) maize; (5) vetch and oat; (6) pea and barley and (7) goat's-rue. The most productive crop was goat's-rue which showed green mass yield of 20.27 t/ha. Rape, maize, vetch and oat mix had green mass yield of 19.78, 20.11 and 16.42 t/ha, respectively. Winter wheat and pea produced 2.4 and 1.18 t/ha of grain, respectively. Application of mineral fertilizers increased yield by 25-40%. Detailed data are presented in 2 tables.