Authors
H Nezomba, TP Tauro, F Mtambanengwe, P Mapfumo
Publication date
2010/1/20
Journal
Field Crops Research
Volume
115
Issue
2
Pages
149-157
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Widening the range of organic nutrient resources, especially N sources, is a major challenge for improving crop productivity of smallholder farms in southern Africa. A study was conducted over three seasons to evaluate different species of indigenous legumes for their biomass productivity, N2-fixation and residual effects on subsequent maize crops on nutrient-depleted fields belonging to smallholder farmers under contrasting rainfall zones in Zimbabwe. Under high rainfall (>800mmyr−1), 1-year indigenous legume fallows (indifallows), comprising mostly species of the genera Crotalaria, Indigofera and Tephrosia, yielded 8.6tha−1 of biomass within 6 months, out-performing sunnhemp (Crotalaria juncea L.) green manure and grass (natural) fallows by 41% and 74%, respectively. A similar trend was observed under medium (650–750mmyr−1) rainfall in Chinyika, where the indifallow attained a biomass yield of 6 …
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