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Impacts of fertilization management strategies on improved sorghums varieties in smallholder farming systems in Mali: Productivity and profitability differences

Sorghum is an important cereal crop cultivated by smallholder farmers of Mali, contributing significantly to their food demand and security. The study evaluated different fertilization strategies that combined organic and inorganic fertilizer applications with three sorghum varieties. The experiment...

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Autores principales: Akinseye, Folorunso M., Birhanu, Birhanu Zemadim, Ajeigbe, Hakeem A., Diancoumba, Madina, Sanogo, Karamoko, Tabo, Ramadjita
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10040514/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36994404
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e14497
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author Akinseye, Folorunso M.
Birhanu, Birhanu Zemadim
Ajeigbe, Hakeem A.
Diancoumba, Madina
Sanogo, Karamoko
Tabo, Ramadjita
author_facet Akinseye, Folorunso M.
Birhanu, Birhanu Zemadim
Ajeigbe, Hakeem A.
Diancoumba, Madina
Sanogo, Karamoko
Tabo, Ramadjita
author_sort Akinseye, Folorunso M.
collection PubMed
description Sorghum is an important cereal crop cultivated by smallholder farmers of Mali, contributing significantly to their food demand and security. The study evaluated different fertilization strategies that combined organic and inorganic fertilizer applications with three sorghum varieties. The experiments were conducted over three cropping seasons (2017–2019) in three sites (Bamako, Bougouni, and Koutiala respectively) within the Sudanian region of Mali. Our results showed a significant effect of season, variety, and fertilization strategies on grain and stalk yields. Grain yield increased by 8–40% in Koutiala, 11–53% in Bougouni, and 44–110% in Bamako while the average stalk yield was above 5000 kg ha(−1) with fertilized treatment compared to unfertilized treatment in the three sites. Fadda performed the best variety, mean grain yield was 23% and 42% higher than that of Soumba and Tieble, respectively. Similarly, there was a progressive increase in grain yield with an increasing level of poultry manure (PM) from 0 to 150 g/hill and cattle manure (CM) from 0 to 100 g/hill. However, the application of 100 g/hill of CM and PM plus 3 g/hill of Di-ammonium Phosphate (DAP) increased yield by 8% and 12% respectively compared to only CM or PM treatments. The results further revealed higher yield gain by 51% (Bamako), 57% (Koutiala), and 42% (Bougouni) for T(10)-[PM (100 g/hill) + Micro-D_DAP (3 g/hill)] equivalent to 73 kgNha(−1) than others (T(2)-T(9)), but not proportionate to the highest value-cost ratio (VCR). Radar charts used to visualize sustainable intensification (SI) performance in the three domains (productivity, profitability, and environment) showed that the environmental variable has a direct influence on productivity, meanwhile profitability across the strategies ranged from low to moderate value across sites and different fertilizer strategies. Our study, therefore, recommends the use of multiple-choice fertilizer strategies includingT(2)-CM (50 g/hill)+PM(50 g/hill), T(5)-DAP-Micro-D (3 g/hill), T(6)-DAP41:46:00 and T(9)-PM(50 g/hill) alongside with improved sorghum varieties tested, for higher productivity and profitability across the region.
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spelling pubmed-100405142023-03-28 Impacts of fertilization management strategies on improved sorghums varieties in smallholder farming systems in Mali: Productivity and profitability differences Akinseye, Folorunso M. Birhanu, Birhanu Zemadim Ajeigbe, Hakeem A. Diancoumba, Madina Sanogo, Karamoko Tabo, Ramadjita Heliyon Article Sorghum is an important cereal crop cultivated by smallholder farmers of Mali, contributing significantly to their food demand and security. The study evaluated different fertilization strategies that combined organic and inorganic fertilizer applications with three sorghum varieties. The experiments were conducted over three cropping seasons (2017–2019) in three sites (Bamako, Bougouni, and Koutiala respectively) within the Sudanian region of Mali. Our results showed a significant effect of season, variety, and fertilization strategies on grain and stalk yields. Grain yield increased by 8–40% in Koutiala, 11–53% in Bougouni, and 44–110% in Bamako while the average stalk yield was above 5000 kg ha(−1) with fertilized treatment compared to unfertilized treatment in the three sites. Fadda performed the best variety, mean grain yield was 23% and 42% higher than that of Soumba and Tieble, respectively. Similarly, there was a progressive increase in grain yield with an increasing level of poultry manure (PM) from 0 to 150 g/hill and cattle manure (CM) from 0 to 100 g/hill. However, the application of 100 g/hill of CM and PM plus 3 g/hill of Di-ammonium Phosphate (DAP) increased yield by 8% and 12% respectively compared to only CM or PM treatments. The results further revealed higher yield gain by 51% (Bamako), 57% (Koutiala), and 42% (Bougouni) for T(10)-[PM (100 g/hill) + Micro-D_DAP (3 g/hill)] equivalent to 73 kgNha(−1) than others (T(2)-T(9)), but not proportionate to the highest value-cost ratio (VCR). Radar charts used to visualize sustainable intensification (SI) performance in the three domains (productivity, profitability, and environment) showed that the environmental variable has a direct influence on productivity, meanwhile profitability across the strategies ranged from low to moderate value across sites and different fertilizer strategies. Our study, therefore, recommends the use of multiple-choice fertilizer strategies includingT(2)-CM (50 g/hill)+PM(50 g/hill), T(5)-DAP-Micro-D (3 g/hill), T(6)-DAP41:46:00 and T(9)-PM(50 g/hill) alongside with improved sorghum varieties tested, for higher productivity and profitability across the region. Elsevier 2023-03-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10040514/ /pubmed/36994404 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e14497 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Akinseye, Folorunso M.
Birhanu, Birhanu Zemadim
Ajeigbe, Hakeem A.
Diancoumba, Madina
Sanogo, Karamoko
Tabo, Ramadjita
Impacts of fertilization management strategies on improved sorghums varieties in smallholder farming systems in Mali: Productivity and profitability differences
title Impacts of fertilization management strategies on improved sorghums varieties in smallholder farming systems in Mali: Productivity and profitability differences
title_full Impacts of fertilization management strategies on improved sorghums varieties in smallholder farming systems in Mali: Productivity and profitability differences
title_fullStr Impacts of fertilization management strategies on improved sorghums varieties in smallholder farming systems in Mali: Productivity and profitability differences
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of fertilization management strategies on improved sorghums varieties in smallholder farming systems in Mali: Productivity and profitability differences
title_short Impacts of fertilization management strategies on improved sorghums varieties in smallholder farming systems in Mali: Productivity and profitability differences
title_sort impacts of fertilization management strategies on improved sorghums varieties in smallholder farming systems in mali: productivity and profitability differences
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10040514/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36994404
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e14497
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