Affiliation:
1. Delta State University, Nigeria
2. Ambrose Alli University, Nigeria
Abstract
The increased productivity or yield advantage provided by intercropping is attributed to a better use of resources by crops grown in mixtures, as compared to the same species grown in sole stands. In an intercropping system with upland rice and cowpea, the intra and inter-competition was quantified, as affected by plant population density and rate of nitrogen. Reductions in number of panicles per rice plant and number of grains per panicle were obtained with high density in both sole and mixture rice populations. Increasing nitrogen rate did not affect yield and yield components in both populations, but number and weight of pods per plant of cowpea in sole stands increased. Land equivalent ratios exceeding unity were obtained, indicating an improved resource use by the crop mixture. Relative crowding coefficient and aggressivity indices showed cowpea to be the dominant crop, with rice being dominated. Nitrogen utilization efficiency was high with intercrops, but was generally poor in stands of high population density.
Subject
Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Reference32 articles.
1. Evaluation of selected legume cover crops for biomass production, dry season survival and soil fertility improvement in a moist savanna location in Nigeria;ABAYOMI Y.A.;African Crop Science Journal,2001
2. Effects of number of plants per hill and within row spacing on grain yield performance of open: pollinated and hybrid maize;ALOFE C.O.;Ife Journal of Agriculture,1997
3. Competition and crop performance in a leek: celery intercropping system;BAUMANN D.T.;Crop Science,2001
4. Evaluation of Cowpea lines in Nigerian Cropping Systems;BLADE S.F.,1992
5. Onions and other vegetable alliums;BREWSTER J.L.,1994
Cited by
13 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献