eprintid: 9264 rev_number: 8 eprint_status: archive userid: 17 dir: disk0/00/00/92/64 datestamp: 2016-01-19 10:00:44 lastmod: 2016-01-19 10:00:44 status_changed: 2016-01-19 10:00:44 type: article metadata_visibility: show contact_email: Library-ICRISAT@CGIAR.ORG creators_name: Ibrahim, A creators_name: Abaidoo, R C creators_name: Fatondji, D creators_name: Opoku, A icrisatcreators_name: Ibrahim, A icrisatcreators_name: Fatondji, D affiliation: Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (Kumasi) affiliation: ICRISAT (Niamey) affiliation: International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (Ibadan) country: Ghana country: Niger country: Nigeria title: Integrated use of fertilizer micro-dosing and Acacia tumida mulching increases millet yield and water use efficiency in Sahelian semi-arid environment ispublished: pub subjects: S1.5 divisions: D4 crps: crp1.4 full_text_status: restricted keywords: Organic mulch, Fertilizer micro-dosing, Acacia tumida, Millet yield, Water use efficiency abstract: Limited availability of soil organic amendments and unpredictable rainfall, decrease crop yields drastically in the Sahel. There is, therefore, a need to develop an improved technology for conserving soil moisture and enhancing crop yields in the Sahelian semi-arid environment. A 2-year field experiment was conducted to investigate the mulching effects of Acacia tumida pruning relative to commonly applied organic materials in Niger on millet growth, yields and water use efficiency (WUE) under fertilizer micro-dosing technology. We hypothesized that (1) A. tumida pruning is a suitable mulching alternative for crop residues in the biomass-scarce areas of Niger and (2) combined application of A. tumida mulch and fertilizer micro-dosing increases millet yield and water use efficiency. Two fertilizer micro-dosing options (20 kg DAP ha−1, 60 kg NPK ha−1) and three types of organic mulches (millet straw, A. tumida mulch, and manure) and the relevant control treatments were arranged in factorial experiment organized in a randomized complete block design with four replications. Fertilizer micro-dosing increased millet grain yield on average by 28 %. This millet grain yield increased further by 37 % with combined application of fertilizer micro-dosing and organic mulch. Grain yield increases relative to the un-mulched control were 51 % for manure, 46 % for A. tumida mulch and 36 % for millet mulch. Leaf area index and root length density were also greater under mulched plots. Fertilizer micro-dosing increased WUE of millet on average by 24 %, while the addition of A. tumida pruning, manure and millet increased WUE on average 55, 49 and 25 %, respectively. We conclude that combined application of micro-dosing and organic mulch is an effective fertilization strategy to enhance millet yield and water use efficiency in low-input cropping systems and that A. tumida pruning could serve as an appropriate mulching alternative for further increasing crop yields and water use efficiency in the biomass-scarce and drought prone environment such as the Sahel. However, the economic and social implications and the long-term agronomic effects of this agroforestry tree in Sahelian millet based system have to be explored further. date: 2015 date_type: published publication: Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems volume: 103 number: 3 publisher: Springer Netherlands pagerange: 375-388 refereed: TRUE issn: 1385-1314 official_url: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10705-015-9752-z related_url_url: http://scholar.google.co.in/scholar?as_q=Integrated+use+of+fertilizer+micro-dosing+and+Acacia+tumida+mulching+increases+millet+yield+and+water+use+efficiency+in+Sahelian+semi-arid+environment&as_epq=&as_oq=&as_eq=&as_occt=title&as_sauthors=&as_publication related_url_type: pub citation: Ibrahim, A and Abaidoo, R C and Fatondji, D and Opoku, A (2015) Integrated use of fertilizer micro-dosing and Acacia tumida mulching increases millet yield and water use efficiency in Sahelian semi-arid environment. Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems, 103 (3). pp. 375-388. ISSN 1385-1314 document_url: http://oar.icrisat.org/9264/1/Nutr%20Cycl%20Agroecosyst_103_375%E2%80%93388_2015.pdf