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Effect of coppice management of shrubs associated with cereals on their root dynamics features in dry Western Africa

Authors :
Jourdan, Christophe
Sambou, D.
Ouedraogo, A.
Dione, M.
Tounou, N.
Pouya, M.
Arnal, Didier
Bayala, R.
Lahmar, Rabah
Douzet, Jean-Marie
Cournac, Laurent
Jourdan, Christophe
Sambou, D.
Ouedraogo, A.
Dione, M.
Tounou, N.
Pouya, M.
Arnal, Didier
Bayala, R.
Lahmar, Rabah
Douzet, Jean-Marie
Cournac, Laurent
Source :
4th World Congress on Agroforestry. Book of abstracts
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

To cope with nutrient depletion in poor soils, agronomic strategies have been set up in West Africa by combining traditional annual crops with local shrubs, such as Guiera senegalensis or Piliostigma reticulatum, which contribute significantly to improve soil fertility. These shrubs are traditionally cut to provide fodder to livestock and let the aerial parts of associated crops, such as millet or sorghum, growing freely. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of the management mode of Guiera and Piliostigma in association with millet and sorghum, respectively, on the dynamics and phenology of shrub roots and the agronomic performances of cereals. An experiment was conducted under natural conditions in Senegal where 6 shrubs of Guiera, already well established for several decades, were chosen. Nine young Guiera plants were transplanted to characterize juvenile stage. A millet crop has been established per pouch in and near each shrubbery. A similar experiment was installed in Burkina Faso at the same time where 12 shrubs of Piliostigma, 6 aged of several decades and 6 transplanted juveniles, were associated or not with sorghum. In both situations, half of the shrubs were coppiced, the other left intact as a control object. Rhizotrons of 1x1m were placed 20cm from each shrub in a vertical position, allowing observation of the roots of the shrubs and cereals between 0 and 1m deep. The results showed the positive impacts of the shrubs on the aerial phenology of millet and sorghum (earlier heading, flowering and maturation), their growth (millet four times larger, 1.5 times more leaves, 1.8 times more tillers) and their yield (3.8 times more spikes, 3 times more spike biomass and straw). The root dynamics of shrubs are stalled over the rainy season with a very pronounced seasonal variation in all root categories: higher elongation rates in the wet season compared to the dry one. This seasonal variation was observed in both young 1 to 3 year-old plants (0

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
4th World Congress on Agroforestry. Book of abstracts
Notes :
Burkina Faso, Sénégal, text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1114596108
Document Type :
Electronic Resource