Effects of potassium deficiency, drought, and weevils on banana yield and economic performance in Mbarara, Uganda

This paper reports results from a 6-year long-term fertilizer X banana weevil trial for highland banana in Mbarara, Uganda. The objective of the study was to quantify the effect of mineral fertiliser (100 kg N, 50 kg P, and 100 kg K ha -1 yr-1) on crop and economic performance and weevil pest status. Soil and foliar analyses, and visual observations (i.e. yellowing of leaves) revealed that potassium deficiency was the major soil fertility constraint and a function of slope. Topsoil (0-15 cm) exchangeable K content was low down slope (<0.3 mmolc 100g-1 dm), but higher upslope (>0.6 mmolc 100g-1 dm). As a result, annual yields in the lower block (9 t ha-1) were much lower than in the upper block (17 t ha-1). Yield increase due to fertilizer application (4t ha-1 yr-1) was independent of initial soil fertility status. This observation was in line with foliar analysis, which revealed that K concentrations (2.0 %) were still at deficiency level in fertilized plots, suggesting that 100 kg K ha-1 yr-1 is too little to correct for the deficiency. K deficiency did not only reduce bunch weight, but also increased cycle length, resulting in a significant (r2= 0.57) correlation between these two crop parameters. Mean weevil pressure was too low (< 4%) to result in significant yield loss, but maximum bunch weight was less than 50% in plants with large corm damage (>8%). Overall, the applied fertilizer dose was not profitable; i.e. the mean benefit-cost ratio was 0.7. Probably, application of N and P fertilizer did not increase yields, but the mean benefit-cost ratio is still low (1.6) when N and P fertilizer costs are omitted, and drought-related risks are high. We recommend testing the use of mulch to decrease drought risk and enhance fertilizer use efficiency.

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Main Authors: Okech, S.H., Asten, Piet J.A. van, Gold, C.S., Ssali, H.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2004
Subjects:cosmopolites sordidus, fertilizers, musa,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103365
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1033652023-06-12T20:53:11Z Effects of potassium deficiency, drought, and weevils on banana yield and economic performance in Mbarara, Uganda Okech, S.H. Asten, Piet J.A. van Gold, C.S. Ssali, H. cosmopolites sordidus fertilizers musa This paper reports results from a 6-year long-term fertilizer X banana weevil trial for highland banana in Mbarara, Uganda. The objective of the study was to quantify the effect of mineral fertiliser (100 kg N, 50 kg P, and 100 kg K ha -1 yr-1) on crop and economic performance and weevil pest status. Soil and foliar analyses, and visual observations (i.e. yellowing of leaves) revealed that potassium deficiency was the major soil fertility constraint and a function of slope. Topsoil (0-15 cm) exchangeable K content was low down slope (<0.3 mmolc 100g-1 dm), but higher upslope (>0.6 mmolc 100g-1 dm). As a result, annual yields in the lower block (9 t ha-1) were much lower than in the upper block (17 t ha-1). Yield increase due to fertilizer application (4t ha-1 yr-1) was independent of initial soil fertility status. This observation was in line with foliar analysis, which revealed that K concentrations (2.0 %) were still at deficiency level in fertilized plots, suggesting that 100 kg K ha-1 yr-1 is too little to correct for the deficiency. K deficiency did not only reduce bunch weight, but also increased cycle length, resulting in a significant (r2= 0.57) correlation between these two crop parameters. Mean weevil pressure was too low (< 4%) to result in significant yield loss, but maximum bunch weight was less than 50% in plants with large corm damage (>8%). Overall, the applied fertilizer dose was not profitable; i.e. the mean benefit-cost ratio was 0.7. Probably, application of N and P fertilizer did not increase yields, but the mean benefit-cost ratio is still low (1.6) when N and P fertilizer costs are omitted, and drought-related risks are high. We recommend testing the use of mulch to decrease drought risk and enhance fertilizer use efficiency. 2004 2019-08-21T14:13:03Z 2019-08-21T14:13:03Z Journal Article Okech, S.H., Van Asten, P., Gold, C.S. & Ssali, H. (2004). Effects of potassium deficiency, drought and weevils on banana yield and economic performance in Mbarara, Uganda. Uganda Journal of Agricultural Sciences, 9(1), 511-519. 1026-0919 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103365 en Limited Access p. 511-519
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic cosmopolites sordidus
fertilizers
musa
cosmopolites sordidus
fertilizers
musa
spellingShingle cosmopolites sordidus
fertilizers
musa
cosmopolites sordidus
fertilizers
musa
Okech, S.H.
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Gold, C.S.
Ssali, H.
Effects of potassium deficiency, drought, and weevils on banana yield and economic performance in Mbarara, Uganda
description This paper reports results from a 6-year long-term fertilizer X banana weevil trial for highland banana in Mbarara, Uganda. The objective of the study was to quantify the effect of mineral fertiliser (100 kg N, 50 kg P, and 100 kg K ha -1 yr-1) on crop and economic performance and weevil pest status. Soil and foliar analyses, and visual observations (i.e. yellowing of leaves) revealed that potassium deficiency was the major soil fertility constraint and a function of slope. Topsoil (0-15 cm) exchangeable K content was low down slope (<0.3 mmolc 100g-1 dm), but higher upslope (>0.6 mmolc 100g-1 dm). As a result, annual yields in the lower block (9 t ha-1) were much lower than in the upper block (17 t ha-1). Yield increase due to fertilizer application (4t ha-1 yr-1) was independent of initial soil fertility status. This observation was in line with foliar analysis, which revealed that K concentrations (2.0 %) were still at deficiency level in fertilized plots, suggesting that 100 kg K ha-1 yr-1 is too little to correct for the deficiency. K deficiency did not only reduce bunch weight, but also increased cycle length, resulting in a significant (r2= 0.57) correlation between these two crop parameters. Mean weevil pressure was too low (< 4%) to result in significant yield loss, but maximum bunch weight was less than 50% in plants with large corm damage (>8%). Overall, the applied fertilizer dose was not profitable; i.e. the mean benefit-cost ratio was 0.7. Probably, application of N and P fertilizer did not increase yields, but the mean benefit-cost ratio is still low (1.6) when N and P fertilizer costs are omitted, and drought-related risks are high. We recommend testing the use of mulch to decrease drought risk and enhance fertilizer use efficiency.
format Journal Article
topic_facet cosmopolites sordidus
fertilizers
musa
author Okech, S.H.
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Gold, C.S.
Ssali, H.
author_facet Okech, S.H.
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Gold, C.S.
Ssali, H.
author_sort Okech, S.H.
title Effects of potassium deficiency, drought, and weevils on banana yield and economic performance in Mbarara, Uganda
title_short Effects of potassium deficiency, drought, and weevils on banana yield and economic performance in Mbarara, Uganda
title_full Effects of potassium deficiency, drought, and weevils on banana yield and economic performance in Mbarara, Uganda
title_fullStr Effects of potassium deficiency, drought, and weevils on banana yield and economic performance in Mbarara, Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Effects of potassium deficiency, drought, and weevils on banana yield and economic performance in Mbarara, Uganda
title_sort effects of potassium deficiency, drought, and weevils on banana yield and economic performance in mbarara, uganda
publishDate 2004
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103365
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