Long-term Effects of Fallow, Tillage and Manure Application on Soil Organic Matter and Nitrogen Fractions and on Sorghum Yield under Sudano-Sahelian conditions

AuthorAbdoulaye Mando
AuthorBadiori Ouattara
AuthorA.E. Somado
AuthorM.C.S. Wopereis
Author Leo Stroosnijder
AuthorHenk Breman
Jurisdiction:Sub-saharan Africa
Date of acession2024-03-20T10:24:00Z
Date of availability2024-03-20T10:24:00Z
Date of issue2005
AbstractSoil organic matter (SOM) controls the physical, chemical and biological properties of soil and is a key factor in soil productivity. Data on SOM quantity and quality are therefore important for agricultural sustainability. In 1990, an experiment was set up at Saria, Burkina Faso on a sandy loam Lixisol to evaluate long-term effects of tillage (hand hoeing or oxen ploughing) with or without 10 t ha21 yr 21 of manure and fallowing on SOM and N concentrations and their distribution in particle size fractions. The field was sown annually to sorghum (Sorghum bicolor [L.] Moench). Ten years later, total organic C and total N, SOM fractions and their N concentrations, and sorghum yield were determined. Continuous sorghum cultivation without organic inputs caused significant losses of C and N in the hoed and ploughed plots. However, addition of manure to hoed plots was effective in maintaining similar levels of C and N to fallow plots. Without manure, SOM was mainly stored in the size-fraction ,0.053 mm (fine organic matter, FOM). SOM was mainly stored in the size-fraction between 0.053 and 2 mm (particulate organic matter, POM). In plots with manure and in fallow plots, the addition of manure more than doubled POM concentrations, with levels in tilled plots exceeding those of the fallow plots, and the highest levels in manually hoed plots. Nitrogen associated with POM (POM-N) followed a similar trend to POM. Hoeing and ploughing led to a decline in sorghum grain yield. Manure application increased yields by 56% in the hoed plots and 70% in the ploughed plots. Grain yield was not correlated with total SOM but was positively correlated with total POM. This study indicated that POM was greatly affected by long-term soil management options.
CitationMando, A., B. Ouattara, A.E. Somado,M.C.S. Wopereis, L. Stroosnijder and H. Breman. 2005. “Long-Term Effects of Fallow, Tillage and Manure Application on Soil Organic Matter and Nitrogen Fractions and on Sorghum Yield Under Sudano-Sahelian Conditions,” Soil Use and Management, 21:25-31.
URLhttps://hub.ifdc.org/handle/20.500.14297/2986
Languageen
SubjectTillage
SubjectManures
SubjectCrops
SubjectOrganic matter
TitleLong-term Effects of Fallow, Tillage and Manure Application on Soil Organic Matter and Nitrogen Fractions and on Sorghum Yield under Sudano-Sahelian conditions
TypeArticle
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