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Termite-Induced Injuries to Maize and Baby Corn under Organic and Conventional Farming Systems in the Central Highlands of Kenya

Termite-induced injuries to maize and baby corn were evaluated in on-going comparison experiments on organic and conventional farming systems at two trial sites in the Central Highlands of Kenya (Chuka and Thika). The farming systems were established in 2007 at two input levels: Low input level, rep...

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Autores principales: Anyango, John J., Bautze, David, Fiaboe, Komi K. M., Lagat, Zipporah O., Muriuki, Anne W., Stöckli, Sibylle, Onyambu, Gladys K., Musyoka, Martha W., Karanja, Edward N., Adamtey, Noah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6835427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31652540
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects10100367
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author Anyango, John J.
Bautze, David
Fiaboe, Komi K. M.
Lagat, Zipporah O.
Muriuki, Anne W.
Stöckli, Sibylle
Onyambu, Gladys K.
Musyoka, Martha W.
Karanja, Edward N.
Adamtey, Noah
author_facet Anyango, John J.
Bautze, David
Fiaboe, Komi K. M.
Lagat, Zipporah O.
Muriuki, Anne W.
Stöckli, Sibylle
Onyambu, Gladys K.
Musyoka, Martha W.
Karanja, Edward N.
Adamtey, Noah
author_sort Anyango, John J.
collection PubMed
description Termite-induced injuries to maize and baby corn were evaluated in on-going comparison experiments on organic and conventional farming systems at two trial sites in the Central Highlands of Kenya (Chuka and Thika). The farming systems were established in 2007 at two input levels: Low input level, representing subsistence farming (Conv-Low, Org-Low) and high input level, representing commercial farming (Conv-High, Org-High). Termite-induced injuries to maize and baby corn, such as tunneling the stem or lodging the whole plant were assessed over two cropping seasons. The lodging occurred exclusively at Thika. It first became apparent in the Org-Low system, with most of lodging occurring during the vegetative stage. Baby corn grown under high input systems showed increasing lodging from the late vegetative crop stage and peaked before the final harvest. Tunneling was recorded at both sites, but was generally below 5%, with no significant differences between the farming systems. Overall, the injury patterns caused by termites appear to be a function of the plant growth stage, termite colony activities, trial site, and the types and levels of fertilizer input. Thus, the management practice used in each farming system (organic or conventional) might have greater influence on crop injuries than the type of farming system itself or the termite abundance within each system.
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spelling pubmed-68354272019-11-25 Termite-Induced Injuries to Maize and Baby Corn under Organic and Conventional Farming Systems in the Central Highlands of Kenya Anyango, John J. Bautze, David Fiaboe, Komi K. M. Lagat, Zipporah O. Muriuki, Anne W. Stöckli, Sibylle Onyambu, Gladys K. Musyoka, Martha W. Karanja, Edward N. Adamtey, Noah Insects Communication Termite-induced injuries to maize and baby corn were evaluated in on-going comparison experiments on organic and conventional farming systems at two trial sites in the Central Highlands of Kenya (Chuka and Thika). The farming systems were established in 2007 at two input levels: Low input level, representing subsistence farming (Conv-Low, Org-Low) and high input level, representing commercial farming (Conv-High, Org-High). Termite-induced injuries to maize and baby corn, such as tunneling the stem or lodging the whole plant were assessed over two cropping seasons. The lodging occurred exclusively at Thika. It first became apparent in the Org-Low system, with most of lodging occurring during the vegetative stage. Baby corn grown under high input systems showed increasing lodging from the late vegetative crop stage and peaked before the final harvest. Tunneling was recorded at both sites, but was generally below 5%, with no significant differences between the farming systems. Overall, the injury patterns caused by termites appear to be a function of the plant growth stage, termite colony activities, trial site, and the types and levels of fertilizer input. Thus, the management practice used in each farming system (organic or conventional) might have greater influence on crop injuries than the type of farming system itself or the termite abundance within each system. MDPI 2019-10-22 /pmc/articles/PMC6835427/ /pubmed/31652540 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects10100367 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Communication
Anyango, John J.
Bautze, David
Fiaboe, Komi K. M.
Lagat, Zipporah O.
Muriuki, Anne W.
Stöckli, Sibylle
Onyambu, Gladys K.
Musyoka, Martha W.
Karanja, Edward N.
Adamtey, Noah
Termite-Induced Injuries to Maize and Baby Corn under Organic and Conventional Farming Systems in the Central Highlands of Kenya
title Termite-Induced Injuries to Maize and Baby Corn under Organic and Conventional Farming Systems in the Central Highlands of Kenya
title_full Termite-Induced Injuries to Maize and Baby Corn under Organic and Conventional Farming Systems in the Central Highlands of Kenya
title_fullStr Termite-Induced Injuries to Maize and Baby Corn under Organic and Conventional Farming Systems in the Central Highlands of Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Termite-Induced Injuries to Maize and Baby Corn under Organic and Conventional Farming Systems in the Central Highlands of Kenya
title_short Termite-Induced Injuries to Maize and Baby Corn under Organic and Conventional Farming Systems in the Central Highlands of Kenya
title_sort termite-induced injuries to maize and baby corn under organic and conventional farming systems in the central highlands of kenya
topic Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6835427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31652540
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects10100367
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