Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 April 2017
The use of cultivation techniques to conserve rainfall, by preventing runoff, and to improve the soil surface infiltration rate, has produced spectacular increases in the yield of cotton on the Loess Plain soils of Northern Nigeria, where yields of the order of 2000 lb seed cotton per acre can now be produced regularly irrespective of the rainfall pattern. As yields of this level had not been obtained previously, it has been concluded that lack of soil moisture and poor soil aeration have in the past set a ceiling to seed cotton yields. The effects of these cultivation treatments on the two other major crops of the area, sorghum and groundnuts, have now been examined, and results from a series of field experiments over six seasons indicate that adequate soil moisture is essential to the production of high yields, but that the other soil conditions which are alleviated by these cultivations are not so critical for these two crops as they are for cotton. Reasons are suggested why spectacular increases in yield in response to the treatments are not generally to be expected with sorghum and groundnuts.