Crop rotation, tillage and crop residue management for wheat and maize in the sub-humid tropical highlands II. Maize and system performance

被引:50
|
作者
Fischer, RA
Santiveri, F
Vidal, IR
机构
[1] ACIAR, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia
[2] CIMMYT, Mexico City 06600, DF, Mexico
[3] Ctr UdL IRTA, Area Cultius Extensius, Lleida 25198, Spain
[4] Univ Concepcion, Fac Agron, Chillan, Chile
关键词
Zea mays; Triticum aestivum; Vicia sativa; crop rotation; zero tillage; residue management; net economic benefit;
D O I
10.1016/S0378-4290(02)00158-2
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
Cropping systems in the sub-humid tropical highlands are characterised by continuous cultivated cereal monoculture, leading to serious erosion and fertility decline. There is a lack of information on improved agronomy, in particular crop rotation, the use of legumes, reduced tillage and crop residue retention, designed to counter these problems. Over the period 1991-1995 an experiment was carried out in the central highlands of Mexico, at El Batan (latitude 19degrees31'N, longitude 98degrees50'W, altitude 2250 m) to test the effect of improved agronomy. Under rainfed conditions (mean annual rainfall 603 turn, one crop per year), binary rotations of maize-wheat, maize-vetch, wheat-vetch and wheat-medic pasture were compared with continuous wheat and maize. Most rotations were tested under the four combinations of tillage (zero versus cultivated) and crop residue (retained versus harvested). All plots were split for nitrogen fertilizer, and appropriate herbicides were used for weed control. Maize after wheat outyielded continuous maize under all conditions of tillage, residue and nitrogen fertilization. Within the maize-wheat rotation, zero tillage with residue retention was clearly superior (average yield across N levels of 5025 kg/ha at 10% moisture) to the other tillage-residue combinations (average 4249 kg/ha), and during dry periods, showed less wilting. With continuous maize, yield was especially poor with zero tillage regardless of residue (average 3113 kg/ha), and this was associated with poor early growth and variable stunting even under wet conditions and for which there is no clear explanation. Maize after vetch yielded well with zero tillage (4372 kg/ha), but poorly with cultivation (3128 kg/ha), possibly due to less soil water at sowing in the latter. The main treatment yield variation was associated with either wilting score or radiation interception or both, all measured before tasseling. Observations of ponding and runoff during rain events indicated that runoff was negligible where crop residue was retained on the surface with zero tillage, but significant in all the other tillage-residue combinations. Without nitrogen, maize after vetch outyielded the other rotations, but these latter yielded more with N, having a much greater response to fertilizer nitrogen (18.4 kg/kg versus 4.5 kg/kg). The average net economic benefit, calculated for each cropping system by partial budgeting, was best for farmer practice with fertilizer, although vetch-maize with zero tillage and residue removal, and wheat-maize with cultivation and residue removal, both with nitrogen fertilizer, were close behind this treatment. Residue retention was disadvantaged by the high value of residues as fodder, and Wheat rotations by the lower yield relative to maize, for no grain price advantage in the Mexican market. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:123 / 137
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Carbon stock, aggregate stability and hydraulic properties of soils under tillage, crop rotation and mineral fertiliser application in sub-humid Zimbabwe
    Jephita, Gotosa
    Jefline, Kodzwa
    Willis, Gwenzi
    Justice, Nyamangara
    HELIYON, 2023, 9 (05)
  • [42] Effects of relay cover crop planting date on their biomass and maize productivity in a sub-humid region of Zimbabwe under conservation agriculture
    Mhlanga, Blessing
    Cheesman, Stephanie
    Maasdorp, Barbara
    Mupangwa, Walter
    Munyoro, Colleta
    Sithole, Cephas
    Thierfelder, Christian
    NJAS-WAGENINGEN JOURNAL OF LIFE SCIENCES, 2016, 78 : 93 - 101
  • [43] The effect of crop rotation and tillage practice on residue decomposition and wheat performance in the Western Cape, South Africa
    Theron, Johannes Stephanus
    van Coller, Gerhardus Johannes
    Rose, Lindy Joy
    Labuschagne, Johan
    Swanepoel, Pieter Andreas
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF PLANT AND SOIL, 2023, 40 (01) : 13 - 22
  • [44] Soilborne Pathogens of Cereals in an Irrigated Cropping System: Effects of Tillage, Residue Management, and Crop Rotation
    Paulitz, T. C.
    Schroeder, K. L.
    Schillinger, W. F.
    PLANT DISEASE, 2010, 94 (01) : 61 - 66
  • [45] Effect of tillage, crop residue and phosphorus management practices on the productivity and profitability of maize (Zea mays) cultivation in Inceptisols
    Kumar, Amit
    Behera, U. K.
    Dhar, Shiva
    Shukla, Livleen
    Bhatiya, Arti
    Meena, M. C.
    Gupta, Gaurendra
    Singh, Ramesh Kumar
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES, 2018, 88 (10): : 1558 - 1567
  • [46] Effects of straw application on soil hydrothermal conditions and crop yield in a maize and wheat rotation system
    Du, Mingcheng
    Zhang, Jianyun
    Chen, Qiuwen
    Lin, Yuqing
    Yan, Hanlu
    Liu, Cuishan
    Wang, Zhenlong
    Wang, Guoqing
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2024, 38 (08)
  • [47] Wheat (Triticum spp) roots influenced by crop residue and phosphorus under maize (Zea mays)-wheat system
    Sharma, V. K.
    Meena, M. C.
    Dwivedi, B. S.
    Kumar, Sarvendra
    Chobhe, Kapil A.
    Dey, Abir
    Anil, Ajin S.
    Mohankumar, K. T.
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES, 2021, 91 (11): : 1650 - 1654
  • [48] Soil nutrients and crop yield response to conservation-effective management practices in the sub-humid highlands agro-ecologies of Kenya
    Kiboi, M. N.
    Ngetich, F. K.
    Mucheru-Muna, M. W.
    Diels, J.
    Mugendi, D. N.
    HELIYON, 2021, 7 (06)
  • [49] Effect of tillage practices and residue management on soil quality and crop yield under maize (Zea mays)-based cropping system in Mollisol
    Singh, Veer
    Srivastava, Ajaya
    Singh, R. K.
    Savita, U. S.
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES, 2011, 81 (11): : 1019 - 1025
  • [50] Effect of tillage and residue management on soil physical properties and crop productivity in maize (Zea mays)-Indian mustard (Brassica juncea) system
    Saha, S.
    Chakraborty, D.
    Sharma, A. R.
    Tomar, R. K.
    Bhadraray, S.
    Sen, U.
    Behera, U. K.
    Purakayastha, T. J.
    Garg, R. N.
    Kalra, N.
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES, 2010, 80 (08): : 679 - 685