Effect of rhizobium inoculation of beans on growth and yield of maize and beans under different Intercropping patterns
Date
2005Author
Mustafa, KN
Chemining'wa, GN
Nyabundi, JO
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The same row and this also out-yielded sole Rhizobium inoculation of beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) and intercropping patterns of maize and beans were evaluated for two seasons in a field study. Plant population of each crop in all planting patterns was 53,333 plants ha-1. Beans were either uninoculated or inoculated with Rhizobium. Planting patterns consisted of maize and beans intercropped in the same hill, maize and beans intercropped as. alternating plants in the same row, maize and beans intercropped in alternate rows, sole maize and sole beans. Increasing intimacy between the intercrop species and inoculation significantly increased biomass and leaf area indices of both maize and beans, and also the number of nodules per bean plant. Inoculation significantly increased yield of maize in all intercropping treatments. In the inoculated treatments, intercropping maize and beans in the same hill had significantly higher maize grain yield than intercropping in alternate hills in the same row and this, in turn, out-yielded sole maize cropping and intercropping in alternate rows whose yields were not significantly different. When beans were inoculated, similar results were obtained but in the second season no difference was observed between intercropping in the same hill and intercropping in alternate hills in the same row. Sole maize was also significantly superior to maize intercropped with beans in alternate rows. Beans intercropped with maize in the same hill out-yielded beans intercropped with maize in alternate hills in the same row and this also out-yielded sole beans. Beans intercropped with maize in alternate rows had the lowest yield. These results demonstrate the superiority of intercropping maize and beans in close proximity and Rhizobium inoculation both of which promoted nodulation by the bean plants. There is need to establish why beans intercropped with maize in the same hill out¬yielded sole beans.
URI
http://agris.fao.org/agris-search/search/display.do?f=2008%2FKE%2FKE0702.xml%3BKE2007200155http://hdl.handle.net/11295/50447
Citation
Annual Conference,Soil Science Society of East Africa (SSSEA), Annual Conference, 21, Nairobi (Kenya), 1-5 Dec 2003.- 9966-879-59-5.- p.401-408Publisher
Soil Science Society of East Africa, Nairobi (Kenya) Department of Crop Science