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THE ROLE OF CATTLE MANURE IN ENHANCING ON-FARM PRODUCTIVITY, MACRO- AND MICRO-NUTRIENT UPTAKE, AND PROFITABILITY OF MAIZE IN THE GUINEA SAVANNA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2008

A. C. FRANKE*
Affiliation:
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Oyo Road, Ibadan, Nigeria
S. SCHULZ
Affiliation:
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Oyo Road, Ibadan, Nigeria
B. D. OYEWOLE
Affiliation:
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Oyo Road, Ibadan, Nigeria
J. DIELS
Affiliation:
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Oyo Road, Ibadan, Nigeria
O. K. TOBE
Affiliation:
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Oyo Road, Ibadan, Nigeria
*
Corresponding author: Linus.Franke@wur.nl

Summary

An on-farm trial was conducted in the northern Guinea savanna of Nigeria, over a period of five years, with the objectives of quantifying the effects on maize of applying cattle manure in combination with synthetic fertilizer with regard to soil characteristics, yield, plant nutrition and profitability. Maize grain yield was significantly increased by the annual application of cattle manure, compared to maize receiving an equal amount of N through synthetic fertilizer, but only from the third year of the experiment. The application of manure resulted in higher soil Kjel N, Bray-I P and exchangeable K values, and an increased N utilization efficiency by maize, suggesting that yield-limiting factors other than N deficiencies were of lesser importance than in the treatment receiving sole inorganic fertilizer. Nutrients other than N applied via the manure, particularly P, K and/or B, may have contributed to the higher grain yields in treatments receiving manure. A partial budgeting analysis revealed that, over a 5-year period, investments in the application of manure, in combination with synthetic fertilizer, resulted in higher margins than the application of fertilizer alone. However, analyses of marginal rates of return of changes from low urea N to high urea N or additional manure applications suggested that it was more profitable to invest in additional urea than in organic manure in the first two years of the experiment. The results suggested that manure applications, even when applied at relatively high rates, did not serve as a quick fix to on-farm soil fertility problems, but over a longer period, manure applied in combination with synthetic fertilizers did provide a significant and profitable contribution to enhanced cereal production.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2008

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