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Sesbania tree fallows on phosphorus-deficient sites: Maize yield and financial benefit

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Rotation of Sesbania sesban (L.) Merr., a fast-growing N2-fixing tree, with maize (Zea mays L.) has potential for increasing fertility of tropical soils, where fertilizer use by resource-poor farmers is limited. At two sites in Kenya (Ochinga, with a Kandiudalfic Eutrudox soil, and Muange, with a Kandic Paleustalf), we compared maize yields and financial returns for (i) sesbania grown for three or four seasons followed by three maize crops (sesbania fallow), (ii) one maize crop followed by natural regrowth of vegetation for three seasons and then three maize crops (natural fallow), and (iii) maize monoculture for seven seasons. After the fallows, plots were split with and without added P. Maize responded to P at both sites. Cumulative grain yields for seven seasons of maize monoculture were 8.4 Mg ha1 at Ochinga and 5.6 Mg ha1 at Muange. They were comparable to cumulative maize yields for sesbania fallow (Ochinga, 10.6 Mg ha1 Muange, 4.5 Mg ha1) and natural fallow (Ochinga, 7.7 Mg ha1; Muange, 4.2 Mg ha1), even though maize was grown for only three or four seasons in the fallow treatments. Sesbania fallow was financially attractive at Ochinga (500 mm rain in each season) but not at Muange, where low rainfall (

DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2134/agronj1998.00021962009000060001x
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    Publication year

    1998

    Authors

    Jama, B.A.; Buresh, R.J.; Place, F.M.

    Language

    English

    Keywords

    maize, fertilizers, monoculture, nutrients, phosphorus, phosphate fertilizers, crop yield, cropping systems, zea mays

    Geographic

    Kenya

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