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Venant Rutunga, Nancy K. Karanja & Charles K.K. Gachene

Six month-duration Tephrosia vogelii Hook.f. and Tithonia diversifolia (Hemsl.) A.Gray planted-fallows for improving maize production in Kenya

(volume 12 (2008) — numéro 3)
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Nota's van de redactie

Received on August 30, 2007, accepted on December 4, 2007

Résumé

Six mois de jachères plantées de Tephrosia vogelii Hook.f. et Tithonia diversifolia (Hemsl.) A.Gray en vue de la production régulière et performante du maïs au Kenya. Une recherche portant sur les jachères plantées de Tephrosia vogelii et Tithonia diversifolia ainsi que sur le recru naturel a été menée à Maseno, Kenya, pour déterminer si les jachères installées sur une terre fatiguée pouvaient produire assez de biomasse en six mois, si la biomasse retenue sur place ou transférée dans une parcelle sous culture continue de maïs et complétée ou non par un apport de phosphore pouvait améliorer le rendement de la culture et enfin s'il y a un avantage à répéter régulièrement ces jachères sur les mêmes parcelles. La première jachère était installée en blocs complets aléatoires avec trois répétitions. A sa coupe, la biomasse était quantifiée, puis soit incorporée dans la même parcelle soit transférée dans une parcelle régulièrement sous maïs, ces parcelles étant alors divisées en deux, à savoir celles avec et celles sans addition d'engrais phosphaté inorganique en vue de tester l'impact des fumures sur l'augmentation de rendement de maïs. La culture de maïs et la seconde jachère étaient ainsi conduites en parcelles divisées. Les jachères de T. vogelii et T. diversifolia ont produit plus de 9 Mg de biomasse totale qui accumulait 154-234 kg N.ha-1, rendement supérieur à celui obtenu dans le recru naturel. Les arbustes étaient également supérieurs à la jachère naturelle quant à l'accumulation du phosphore (5-22 contre 2 kg.ha-1). La biomasse aérienne récoltée de ces deux arbustes de jachère a, une fois incorporée dans le sol ou transférée dans la parcelle sous culture continue, augmenté le rendement de maïs de 2,5 fois par rapport à la culture non fumée, le témoin. L'addition de 20 kg P.ha-1 à cette biomasse a augmenté le rendement de la 1re culture de maïs de près de 40 %. La productivité des parcelles où la biomasse aérienne de T. vogelii et T. diversifolia avait été retirée était basse pour le maïs et la 2e jachère en comparaison avec la performance observée dans les parcelles où cette biomasse avait été retenue ou incorporée. Assurer une productivité durable dans les sols fatigués requiert la mise en jachère améliorée d'au moins une saison alternant avec une saison de culture de maïs avec un apport complémentaire de P inorganique.

Mots-clés : rendement, Engrais verts, jachères plantées, culture de maïs, addition de phosphore

Abstract

An experiment including planted Tephrosia vogelii and Tithonia diversifolia fallow species and natural fallow was conducted at Maseno, Kenya, for assessing whether these fallows grown on a nutrient depleted land could produce sufficient green manure in six month period, whether their biomass retained on the same plots or transferred to continuously cropped plots with or without added P fertiliser could increase yield of consecutive maize crops and whether it is useful to regularly repeat these fallows on same plots. First fallow was established in randomized complete blocks with three replicates. At harvesting, biomass was recorded, then either incorporated in situ or transferred to continuous cropped plots split with and without added P fertiliser and monitored for the effect in improving consecutive maize crops. The second fallow was managed on this split plot design. The two-planted shrubs fallows produced more than 9 Mg total dry biomass and accumulated 154 to 234 kg N.ha-1, which were significantly higher compared to the production in the natural fallow. The shrubs were also superior to natural fallow for P accumulation (5-22 kg versus 2 kg.ha-1). The aboveground dry biomass harvested from planted T. vogelii and T. diversifolia and either incorporated in situ or transferred into continuously cropped plots increased maize yields by 2.5 folds compared to the unmanured crop, the control. Supplementing the organic materials with an additional 20 kg P inorganic fertilizer increased the 1st maize yield by about 40%. Productivity in the plots with T. vogelii or T. diversifolia aboveground biomass removal was low for the subsequent fallow and maize crops when compared to the performance in plots where biomass was incorporated. To achieve sustained yields of maize in depleted soils requires regular improved fallowing at least one season alternating with one season maize, and additional P inputs.

Keywords : rotation, rotation, yield, Green manure, planted fallows, maize crop, phosphorus addition

1. Introduction

1Continuous cultivation of African farms with little or no nutrient inputs addition coupled by erosion losses has led to the depletion of soil fertility (Stoorvogel et al., 1993). A survey carried out in Western Kenya by Swinkels et al. (1997) showed that 50% of the farmers let about 10-50% of the land remain uncultivated and native vegetation allowed to regenerate (e.g. natural fallow) for at least a period of six months, mainly for soil fertility restoration. Natural fallows normally require long periods ranging from 2-20 years for soil fertility restoration to be achieved (Van Reuler et al., 1993) and this is not applicable to farmers in Western Kenya who are confronted with land shortage given average farm size ranges between 0.2-2.5 ha (Amadalo et al., 2003).

2Fast growing tree and shrub species such as Tephrosia vogelii Hook.f. and Tithonia diversifolia (Hemsl.) A.Gray, Leucaena sp., Sesbania sesban (L.) Merr., which produce large amount of high quality biomass during a growth period of one to three years have been identified as an alternative to natural fallow (Kang et al., 1987; Niang et al., 2002; Rao et al., 2002) but the biomass produced is low in phosphorus compared to the crop P requirement (Palm, 1995). Using these shrubs as planted fallows for a period of one year or more in the cropping system has been studied but the fallow period is still too long for a farmer who needs at least to harvest one crop a year for his household consumption. Since the residual benefits of fallows on the productivity of subsequent crops usually lasts for one to two cropping seasons (Szott et al., 1999), the time for cropping might vary between 1/3 and 2/3 of the total crop-fallow cycle (R = 0.67; Ruthenberg, 1980). Biomass transfer experiments and one season duration fallows were then conducted in Western Kenya (Rutunga et al., 1999; Jama et al., 2000; Amadalo et al., 2003) but there was no assessment for the potential of biomass production and nutrient accumulation by fallows under the transfer strategy on the same experimental site.

3Maize (Zea mays L.) is the second most important cereal crop in the world (IFPRI, 1991) and the main staple food crop in Kenya (Central Bureau of Statistics, 1991). Maize grain yields range from 0.4 to 2.0 Mg.ha-1 in Western Kenya (Jama et al., 1997) with an average of 1.5 Mg.ha-1 for Kenya (Central Bureau of Statistics, 1995). This low yield is essentially due to disease and pest infestation (e.g., Striga sp.), inappropriate husbandry techniques and low soil fertility (mainly low N and P). Where diseases, pests and erosion are controlled, maize yields can be improved through addition of N and P to the soil, using brown and green manure (Kang et al., 1987; Mugwira et al., 1997), inorganic fertilisers (Roy et al., 2006), or better a combination of organic and inorganic fertiliser inputs especially in soils with low inherent cation exchange capacity (Rutunga et al., 1998; Jama et al, 1998; Rao et al., 2002).

4Janzen et al. (1990) pointed out that application of fast decomposing organic materials could benefit the current crop rather than the subsequent crop. Maize stover, which is of low quality (low N and P content) is a common residue found in small-scale farms (Giller et al., 1997; Karanja et al., 1998). Mixing low quality material such as cereal residues with high quality material in equal ratio (e.g. 50%-50%) contributed more positively to crop production than did the high quality material alone (Kuo et al., 1998). Incorporating high quality T. vogelii or T. diversifolia biomass alone, or in mixtures with maize stover that are readily available on farms, may ensure better nutrient management and productive cropping but this needs to be quantified.

5The objectives of this study were:

6– to compare planted fallows using T. vogelii or T. diversifolia in terms of biomass produced and nutrients accumulation,

7– to assess simultaneously and on the same plots the effect of T. vogelii and T. diversifolia planted fallows and biomass transfer systems on maize yields,

8– to assess in planted fallow and biomass transfer systems the added benefit from mineral P fertiliser supplementation to maize yield.

2. Material and methods

2.1. Site description

9The study was conducted near Maseno Agroforestry Research Centre in Kenya at latitude 0°0' and longitude 34°35' E, altitude 1,500 m above the sea level, and with a slope of 4%. Given the bimodal rainfall pattern, there are two crop growing seasons: the short (September to January) and the long (March to August) rainy seasons. The study was carried out from September 1996 to August 1999. The climate of the study area is classified as humid with a ratio of mean annual rainfall to average annual evaporation (R/Eo) > 0.85 (Sombroek et al., 1980). The rainfall during the period of study was sufficient (average annual rainfall between 1,500 and 2,000 mm) but unevenly distributed. The average annual temperature varied from 20 to 23°C with minimum and maximum temperatures of 9.5°C and 35.0°C, respectively.

10The soils found at the experimental site are developed from basic igneous rocks, deep (> 1.5 m depth) and well drained. They are classified as humic Nitisols based on the FAO-UNESCO system (FAO-UNESCO, 1994) and are equivalent to kaolinitic, isohyperthermic Typic Kanhaplohumults in the USDA soil taxonomy system (Soil Survey Staff, 1996). The Ap horizon extends from 0-20 cm, AB from 20-55 cm and Bt horizons from 55-165 cm. Soil primary particles were mostly clay (53% in Ap and 61 to 68% in the deeper horizons). The bulk density increases from 1.2 Mg.m-3 in the Ap horizon to 1.3 Mg.m-3 in the Bt horizons, while soil chemical characteristics include: pH (1:1 soil/water suspension) 4.1 to 5.4, organic C and total N (Okalebo et al., 1993) 18 to 3.0 g.kg-1 and 2.1 to 0.2 g.kg-1 respectively, KCl extractable bases: Ca 0.3 to 1.7, Mg 0.7 to 1.2, K 0.2 cmolc.kg-1, Al 0.6 cmolc.kg-1 to trace and available P (Bray-II method) 3.0 mg.kg-1.

2.2. Fallow phase

11The fallow experiment was conducted in a randomized complete block design with three replicates. The plots were 7.0 m x 10.0 m and were separated by a 2 m wide strip and trenched to 0.6 m. There were eight treatments:

12– Fallow planted plots (T1 and T2): T. vogelii (T1) and T. diversifolia (T2) fallows, grown for a period of six months after which the aboveground biomass was cut and incorporated in the same plot.

13– Biomass transfer plots (T3 and T4): T. vogelii (T3) and T. diversifolia (T4) fallows, grown for a period of six months after which the aboveground biomass was cut and removed from the plots.

14– Natural fallow plot (T5): regeneration of native vegetation comprising Digitaria sp. Haller (78%), Senecio discifolius L. (7%), Crassocephalum vitellinum Moench (6%), Bidens pilosa L. (3%), Cynodon sp. Rich. (2%), Richardia brasiliensis L. (1%) and Leonitis mollissima R.Br. (1%) as the most dominant species recorded after three months growth period.

15– Biomass incorporation plots (T6 and T7): T. vogelii and T. diversifolia biomass removed from T3 and T4 were incorporated in plots under continuous maize crop.

16– Continuous maize cropping plot (T8): the control.

17Establishment of fallows. T. vogelii and T. diversifolia seedlings were raised in the nursery and transplanted in the field at a spacing of 50 cm x 50 cm in early October, 1996. T. vogelii seedlings were inoculated twice with the Bradyrhizobium sp. strain No. 3384 (provenance: MIRCEN, University of Nairobi), ten days after pricking out and eight days before transplanting in the manually tilled field. Weeding was also done manually whenever the need arose in planted fallows only. Natural fallow vegetation was left growing undisturbed. Planted and natural fallows were cut in April 1997 six months after establishing. Maize variety H 512 was planted two weeks before transplanting the shrub seedlings and harvested two months before cutting the fallows; stover were separated from cobs, chopped, spread uniformly on the producing plots while cobs were removed. The details of this experiment and results are reported in Rutunga et al. (1999).

18The second fallow was established from March 1998 to August 1998 on the same plots as for the 1st fallow after two consecutive maize crops. The experimental design for the 2nd fallow was a split plot due to the division of the plot into two sub-plots (size: 7.0 x 5.0 m) for P and no P applied to maize crop after the 1st fallow in April 1997 (Table 1). Maize and planted fallows were established at the same time: for T. vogelii and maize, two seeds were placed in a hole at 2 to 5 cm deep, covered with soil, then thinned to one plant at 3 weeks (T. vogelii) and 1 month after germination (maize); no Rhizobium inoculation. For T. diversifolia, 25 cm long cuttings obtained from mature T. diversifolia stems planted with 2 nodes belowground and 2 aboveground, planted at a slanting angle of about 45° (Kendall et al., 1977). Other procedures were the same as in the first fallow.

Image1

19At cutting the fallows, T. vogelii and T. diversifolia aboveground biomass were chopped into short pieces (5-10 cm long) and then spread uniformly on the whole plot (for the 1st fallow) or sub-plot (for the 2nd fallow). They were then incorporated into the 0 to 10 cm soil depth through manually tilling with a hoe at one week before planting maize crop. The natural fallow biomass was applied on tilled soil as mulch without chopping to avoid digitaria shooting.

2.3. Maize crop phase

20Before planting the 1st maize crop in April 1997, each plot was divided into two sub-plots for the 0 and 20 kg P.ha-1 provided from triple super-phosphate (19% P), changing the experimental design into a randomized split plot with 16 sub-treatments and three replicates (Table 2). Fertiliser was placed in planting holes as it is commonly recommended in Kenya. Maize Hybrid 512 was sown at a spacing of 30 cm x 75 cm, with two seeds per planting hole and thinned to one plant at the first weeding (30 days after sowing), giving a population of 44,444 plants.ha-1. A second weeding was done at 60 days after sowing (DAP). The stalkborer pest (Chilo partellus sp.) was controlled by applying 3% malathion at two-weeks interval from 30 to 58 DAP. Maize was harvested in August at 125 DAP, cobs were removed, while stover was left in situ. The second maize crop was planted in September 1997 and no fertilisers were applied. The 3rd and 4th maize crops were established in September 1998 and April 1999, respectively, with P fertiliser applied only to the 3rd maize crop planted after the 2nd fallow season.

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21In this experiment with fallows, the amount of nutrients added was not equal for various treatments. To assess the eventual bias caused by this difference in nutrient amount for T. vogelii and T. diversifolia on maize growth, a complementary experiment named as “ crop experiment two ” hereafter was designed. The objective was to add the same amount of N and P from fertiliser (urea and triple super-phosphate) and organic inputs (T. vogelii and T. diversifolia leaves/soft twigs, maize stover) and to compare their effect on maize yields. The experiment was a factorial laid out in a randomized complete block design with three replicates, next to experiment with fallows, for seasons Apr.-Aug. 1998 and Sept. 1998-Feb. 1999. The elementary plot size was 5.25 m x 4.50 m. The treatments are shown in table 3 and the rate of 72 kg N and 20 kg P.ha-1 per treatment was adopted being closer to the nutrient amount provided by treatment T6 and T7 in the experiment with fallows. Urea (46% N) and triple super-phosphate (19% P) fertilisers were also used as a control treatment. Land preparation, fertiliser application, crop variety and management and harvest procedures were the same as in the experiment with fallows.

Image3

2.4. Data collection and analyses

22Fallows. Litterfall from T. vogelii and T. diversifolia was collected at two weeks intervals using 1 m2 quadrants, oven dried at 60°C for 72 hours, weighed and then bulked until the fallow cutting. For all fallows, aboveground biomass comprising leaves/soft twigs and stems were weighed, while for maize cobs were separated from stover the only biomass left in the field. A 100 g representative amount was taken from each fresh aboveground biomass, chopped, oven-dried and weighed for moisture and aboveground dry matter quantity. For both planted and natural fallow, small roots (diameter < 2 mm) were sampled at 0-45 cm soil depth using a core sampling as outlined by Van Noordwijk et al. (1995). They were separated from the soil by soaking and washing using water and a 0.05 mm sieve and thus dried in the oven at 60°C to constant weight. Samples for primary taproots of T. vogelii and T. diversifolia were also collected (0 to 45 cm soil depth) weighed and dried for dry biomass determination. Small samples from each type of dried biomass were ground for the determination of N and P content following the procedures described by Anderson et al. (1993). Dry biomass and nutrients from T1 to T5 was subjected to statistical evaluation, using the two and three-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) and contrast methods.

23Maize crops. The maize growth performance in experiment with fallows was assessed by recording biomass increase over time, plant health and colour and the number of plant tasselling over time. The single data for describing the time to tasseling for each plot was obtained using the standard logistic curve in square time (Curnow et al., 1983). Maize from both experiments was harvested at maturity (125 DAP) on 22.40 m2 and 14.62 m2 area for each sub-plot and plots, respectively and border rows excluded. The amount of dry maize grains (12.5% moisture content) and that of dry stover were determined. Maize grain yields from various treatments were statistically analysed, using the three-way analysis of variance. The treatment means were compared, using the least significant difference (LSD) at probability level of 0.05 and 0.01. All statistics were performed using Genstat 3.2 computer software package (Genstat 5, 1995).

3. Results

3.1. Biomass and nutrients accumulation in fallows

24The dry biomass (root, litter and aboveground biomass) from the 1st fallow was highest for T. diversifolia followed by T. vogelii and the least was natural fallow (Table 4). Similar trend was observed in the second fallow; the amount of T. vogelii and T. diversifolia biomass, N and P were higher from the plots where all biomass was retained than from the plots where aboveground biomass had been removed. Such a removal could have led to soil fertility depletion. T. diversifolia materials accumulated more N and P per ha than T. vogelii biomass that was superior to natural fallow products; phosphorus applied one year before had no significant residual effect on the shrub biomass production and on N and P accumulation (Tables 4 and 5). Planted fallows were more performing than the natural fallow for biomass production and nutrient recycling and/or accumulation. Litter, roots and aboveground plant-parts were three important components in quantifying the biomass accumulated, especially for T. diversifolia.

Image4

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3.2. Maize growth and yield

25Between 0 and 60 DAP, maize grown in plots with T. diversifolia biomass was healthier than that in T. vogelii biomass plots as proven by data in table 6. From 60 to 70 DAP, benefits of adding shrub biomass diminished as plants displayed nitrogen deficiency symptoms especially where P fertiliser had been applied got worse at 75 DAP (silking stage). However, T. vogelii plots were less affected than the T. diversifolia ones. Maize tasseling started at 67 DAP and continued for a period of about four weeks, this unevenness being probably due to low soil fertility in unmanured plots. Biomass application shortened the time to 50% tasseling of all plants in the plot (t50) by 1.0 to 4.6 days, while inorganic phosphorus application shortened the time by 2.8 days during the season, compared to the maize planted without fertiliser (p < 0.01). The best treatment with t50 of 7.4 days was with T2 treatment supplied with inorganic P. The interactions between biomass and mineral P were not significant. Maize height at the initial filling stage (90 DAP) was higher in plots where shrub biomass alone or with P fertiliser were applied. Natural fallow (T5) improved the subsequent maize growth particularly at the late stages of growth and grain yields compared to continuous maize cropping (T8).

Image6

26Maize grain yield was higher with T. vogelii or T. diversifolia biomass application (T1, T2, T6, T7) compared to the treatments where such biomass was not applied (T8) or was removed (T3), T. diversifolia (T4) with more litter and roots being an exception (Tables 7 and 8). Shrub biomass addition had greater impact than rotational (rotation benefits, litterfall and roots) effect on the performance of the 1st and 4th maize crops. The removal of large amount of biomass produced by T. vogelii fallow (T3) enhanced soil fertility depletion, yielding maize grain quantity as low as in the continuous maize cropping. Mineral P (20 kg) applied during the current or the previous seasons had a significant effect on maize grain yield but no significant interaction with biomass applied for the 1st and 2nd maize (Table 7). The amount of maize stover was positively correlated with maize grain yield (r2 = 90). Application of 3.3 Mg of T. diversifolia (T7) or 4.4 Mg of T. vogelii of aboveground biomass (T6) added to 2.2 Mg maize stover, which translated to about 89-94 kg N and 4-5 kg P plus 20 kg mineral P per ha increased the 1st maize yield by 2.5 fold as compared to the production in continuous maize cropping (T8). After the first fallow season, relatively higher yields were obtained in the plots with T. vogelii fallow (T1) as compared to where T. diversifolia fallow had been grown (T2). This trend reversed in the maize grown after the 2nd fallow season. The effect of planted shrub biomass and mineral P on maize performance was declining over the seasons following their application. However, the grain yields were too low for the 2nd and 3rd maize due to unfavourable climatic conditions, and high for the 4th maize (Table 8).

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27Results from crop experiment two showed that there were no significant differences between the different organic biomass on maize stover and grain yields in both seasons (Table 9). This indicated that T. vogelii and T. diversifolia leaves and soft twigs were equally efficient when their biomass were applied to supply adequate amounts of N and P nutrients to the maize crop, which implied that any of both shrubs could be used for enhancing maize performance in Western Kenya. Total 20 kg N per ha provided by stover look as if they were as efficient as N amount from shrub biomass in raising maize production.

Image9

4. Discussion

4.1. Biomass production and nutrient accumulation by fallow systems

28The biomass produced by T. vogelii, T. diversifolia and natural fallow during the second fallow was higher than that in the first fallow. This was due to the combined residual effect of organic material and inorganic P applied to the previous first maize crop coupled by the higher rainfall received during that season. According to Fungameza (1991) and Drechsel et al. (1996), the amount of biomass produced by T. vogelii and T. diversifolia is influenced by fertility status of the soil and the amount of rainfall. Rao et al. (2002) also found that P fertiliser addition significantly improved Sesbania biomass production on Maseno P-deficient soils. Roots and litter are important contributors of biomass and nutrient in case fallow incorporation is compared to biomass transfer technology. Some roots decompose slowly (Rutunga et al., 2001), litter has already started to release nutrients and this may contribute to better synchrony of biomass use than with the biomass transfer system alone.

29There was high amount of N accumulated by planted shrubs particularly in the aboveground biomass. High N content in T. vogelii and T. diversifolia leaves was also reported by Nagarajah et al. (1982), Drechsel et al. (1996) and Amadalo et al. (2003). The plant tissue N is provided by soil mineral N and N2 fixed through symbiotic relationships for legumes such as T. vogelii (Sprent et al., 1990). Since T. vogelii was not well nodulated (Rutunga et al., 1999) and T. diversifolia is not a legume, the mechanism used by the two shrubs to extract more nitrogen from the soil than do the natural vegetation and maize need to be assessed. The P concentration in T. diversifolia leaves though higher than that in T. vogelii and natural fallow materials were lower than the value of 2.7-3.8 g.kg-1 recorded by Jama et al. (2000), such a low P accumulation may have been influenced by the inherently lower levels of available P in the soils as compared to those at Jama's sites.

4.2. Maize production

30The severe N deficiency observed in the first maize crop at silking stage in plots with T. diversifolia biomass could be explained by the released N dynamics during the cropping season. Since T. vogelii and T. diversifolia aboveground biomass release about 52 and 80% of their total N, respectively, within the first 30 days after their incorporation into the soil (Rutunga et al., 2001), it could be argued that the amount of N from T. diversifolia biomass yet available in soil was by this time strongly reduced through plant uptake, leaching and to a lesser extent, denitrification (Aulakh et al., 1991). Soils where T. diversifolia biomass was applied showed that at 53 days after planting maize, mineral N had decreased from 0 to 15 cm soil depth and increased from 30 to 60 cm depth (Rutunga, 2000). There is a need to assess the contribution of denitrification or reorganisation to the decline in N obtained from T. diversifolia and the strategy for improving N use efficiency through a better synchrony of nutrient supply and demand.

31The high amount of T. diversifolia biomass applied in T2 plots reduced the period taken for half of the maize plants to have tasselled (t50) by 4.6 days. Berger (1962) pointed out that nutrient deficiencies delayed the interval from emergence to tasseling or silking and addition of fertiliser hastened the time to silking by 4 to 10 days. The effect of six-month planted-fallow on the maize performance was more through biomass addition than rotational benefits that comprise also litterfall and root effect in this study. Application of large amounts of planted shrub biomass (T1, T2, T6, T7) significantly (P = 0.05) increased maize grain yield, compared to the biomass from the natural fallow (T5) and continuous maize crop (T8). Similar results with Calliandra calothyrsus, Sesbania sesban and Leuceana leucocephala were reported by Mafongoya et al. (1997a) in Zimbabwe, Jama et al. (1998) and Rao et al (2002) in other Maseno's experiments. A fast decomposing material such as T. diversifolia biomass may have an advantage due to the fact that the response of maize to the nutrients released, especially nitrogen appears in the early stages of crop growth (Okalebo, 1987). This advantage was not confirmed by crop experiment two where equal amounts of N and P from leaves/soft twigs of T. vogelii and T. diversifolia, maize stover and TSP were applied; both-shrubs biomass had similar effect on the maize grain yield (Table 9).

32The poor performance of maize in plots where aboveground biomass was removed (T3 and T4) was less severe with T. diversifolia that had more litterfall (3 Mg.ha-1) and small roots (1.5 Mg.ha-1) compared to T. vogelii (1 Mg of litterfall and 1 Mg of small roots per ha). This was in agreement with Kang et al. (1987) who found that where biomass was continuously removed, the soil became impoverished. Maize performance in the natural fallow (T5) was slightly higher than that in the continuous cropping (T8), due to the low quality/quantity of biomass and asyncrony in nutrient release in the natural fallow system (Rutunga, 2001). For T8 treatment the maize stover used was low in N (about 9 g N.kg-1 of stover) and could provide near to 20% or 2 kg N.Mg-1 (Sisworo et al., 1990), such a contribution was too low to have any beneficial effect on the maize growth and grain yield. Poor quality (high C/N, low nutrients) organic material was often insufficient for a productive agriculture when used alone (Giller et al., 1997), but positively improves nutrient release synchrony when combined with high quality material (Kuo et al., 1998) and this would hold as an explanation of performing effect obtained with N from maize stover in the crop experiment two.

33The amounts of various biomass applied to the soil did not provide sufficient P to the maize crop and this might be due to their low P content, which was less than 2 kg P.Mg-1 and to the fact that organic material with less than 3 g P.kg-1 led to immobilisation of labile soil P (Singh et al., 1976). Lehmann et al. (1995), Palm (1995) and Rao et al. (2002) have reported such low P supply by other organic inputs. T. diversifolia fallow (T2) plots that had received a greater amount of N-rich biomass produced less maize grain than plots with T. diversifolia aboveground biomass incorporated (T7, 1st maize). No reliable explanation could be formulated except the hypothesis of high average ratio of N to P (more than 14:1) for T. diversifolia biomass) and eventual N or P immobilisation by roots in T. diversifolia fallow.

34The decreasing effect of phosphorus fertiliser and biomass was clearly seen on maize grown during the seasons subsequent to their application but was biased for the grain yields obtained in some seasons. Most nutrients such as N, K, Ca and Mg were released in the first cropping season and used by maize or lost. What was left was therefore insufficient to meet the nutritional requirements of the second maize crop, in agreement with the observation made by Janzen et al. (1990) and Cadisch et al. (1998) that the contribution of N from plant residues applied to a previous crop was 1-4% of the N content of the material originally applied. The too low yield obtained for the second maize following the first fallow was also due to the excess rainfall (about 1,000 mm) received during the season, which might have enhanced loss of available nutrients. In plots with excessive moisture, nitrogen deficiency symptoms appeared more severe probably due to bacterial denitrification that becomes high under anaerobic conditions (Tiedje et al., 1984). Singh et al. (1980) also reported the reduction of maize performance by excessive soil water content. The 4th maize that was the second following the second fallow performed better because of favourable rainfall and residual nutrient contents in the soil, since the drought in the previous season may have reduced the release and leaching of nutrients and also, the nutrient removal by grain harvest.

5. Conclusion

35During a growth period of six months T. vogelii and T. diversifolia produced high amount of biomass with high N content but low P. As fallows-incorporation or biomass-transfer systems, they provided rotational benefits and nutrients hence improved maize production. The effect of both fallows and biomass-transfer technologies depends mostly on the quantity and quality of biomass produced, the methods and time of biomass application and the processes of nutrient release and uptake by the crop (Mafongoya et al., 1997b). Application of 3.5 to 5.0 Mg.ha-1 of shrub dry-matter increased the maize yield by 2.5 times, compared to the maize yield in the nutrient-depleted-control plots (T8) with or without added mineral P. However, with a single application of high amount of T. diversifolia biomass there was a severe N deficiency on maize at the silking stage. Maize yield was increased by about 40% when inorganic P was added. The effect of biomass and inorganic P showed a decreasing trend after one cropping season and this may reflect a low amount of nutrients stored in the soil or a poor availability. Current results confirm that achieving sustained yields of maize in depleted soils such as those in Western Kenya requires regular improved fallowing and additional P inputs; given adverse climatic conditions during these experiments, it was not possible to clearly indicate the best of the two proposed frequencies, i.e. fallow-maize-fallow or fallow-maize-maize-fallow. Biomass incorporation technologies involve the impoverishment of the plots where the biomass is removed while improving the plots in which the transferred biomass is incorporated. Such an impoverishment is less severe with shrubs such as T. diversifolia that produce large amount of litter and roots during the growth period.

36Acknowledgements

37The authors acknowledge Dr R. Coe and J. de Wolf of ICRAF for the help in statistical analyses and Dr C.A. Palm for the early review of the draft. They are also grateful to ISRIC- World Soil Information management for helping Dr Venant Rutunga to pursue his scientific activities. This work was done with the financial support from the Swiss Organisation for Development and Co-operation “ Intercooperation ”.

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Om dit artikel te citeren:

Venant Rutunga, Nancy K. Karanja & Charles K.K. Gachene, «Six month-duration Tephrosia vogelii Hook.f. and Tithonia diversifolia (Hemsl.) A.Gray planted-fallows for improving maize production in Kenya», BASE [En ligne], numéro 3, volume 12 (2008), 267-278 URL : https://popups.ulg.ac.be/1780-4507/index.php?id=2710.

Over : Venant Rutunga

Wageningen University and Research Centre. ISRIC-World Soil Information. P.O. Box 353. NL-6700 AJ Wageningen (The Netherlands). E-mail: rutunga@hotmail.com

Over : Nancy K. Karanja

University of Nairobi. Faculty of Agriculture. Department of Land Resources Management and Agricultural Technology. P.O. Box 30197. Nairobi (Kenya).

Over : Charles K.K. Gachene

University of Nairobi. Faculty of Agriculture. Department of Land Resources Management and Agricultural Technology. P.O. Box 30197. Nairobi (Kenya).