On-farm yield gains with Stress-Tolerant Maize in Eastern and Southern Africa

Maize (Zea mays L.) is the most important staple food in eastern and southern Africa (ESA) with human maize consumption averaging 91 kg capita–1 yr–1. Current maize yield averages 1.2 t ha–1 and is barely suffi cient for the region’s requirements due to drought and low N stresses. Th e objective of this study was to compare new drought tolerant (DT) maize hybrids and open pollinated varieties (OPVs) against the best commercial varieties in ESA under farmer management conditions and to validate on-station results. Maize varieties were simultaneously selected on-station in four types of environments across 44 locations in ESA during the 2008/2009 and 2009/2010 seasons. During the 2010/2011 and 2011/2012 seasons, 20 promising DT maize hybrids and OPVs were selected from the on-station based on their mean grain yield and stability. Th ese selected varieties were compared with the best commercial check varieties on-farm across 80 locations in ESA in a randomized complete block design for two seasons. The genotype + genotype × environment comparison biplot showed variety CZH0616 together with other new DT hybrids to be stable and high yielding across 44 locations on-station in the ESA region compared to the commonly grown checks such as SC513. Th e new DT hybrids showed a yield advantage over the commercial check varieties both in the early and medium-late maturing categories by 4 to 19%, and the gains were bigger under stress conditions. Under farmers’ fi elds CZH0616, CZH0837, CZH0935, and CZH0928 were high yielding and stable across locations.

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Auteurs principaux: Setimela, P.S., Magorokosho, C., Lunduka, R., Gasura, E., Makumbi, D., Amsal Tesfaye Tarekegne, Cairns, J.E., Thokozile Ndhlela, Erenstein, O., Mwangi, W.M.
Format: Article biblioteca
Langue:English
Publié: American Society of Agronomy 2017
Sujets:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, MAIZE, YIELD FACTORS, ON-FARM RESEARCH, RESISTANCE VARIETIES, DROUGHT TOLERANCE,
Accès en ligne:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/18613
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-186132023-10-19T16:27:29Z On-farm yield gains with Stress-Tolerant Maize in Eastern and Southern Africa Setimela, P.S. Magorokosho, C. Lunduka, R. Gasura, E. Makumbi, D. Amsal Tesfaye Tarekegne Cairns, J.E. Thokozile Ndhlela Erenstein, O. Mwangi, W.M. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY MAIZE YIELD FACTORS ON-FARM RESEARCH RESISTANCE VARIETIES DROUGHT TOLERANCE Maize (Zea mays L.) is the most important staple food in eastern and southern Africa (ESA) with human maize consumption averaging 91 kg capita–1 yr–1. Current maize yield averages 1.2 t ha–1 and is barely suffi cient for the region’s requirements due to drought and low N stresses. Th e objective of this study was to compare new drought tolerant (DT) maize hybrids and open pollinated varieties (OPVs) against the best commercial varieties in ESA under farmer management conditions and to validate on-station results. Maize varieties were simultaneously selected on-station in four types of environments across 44 locations in ESA during the 2008/2009 and 2009/2010 seasons. During the 2010/2011 and 2011/2012 seasons, 20 promising DT maize hybrids and OPVs were selected from the on-station based on their mean grain yield and stability. Th ese selected varieties were compared with the best commercial check varieties on-farm across 80 locations in ESA in a randomized complete block design for two seasons. The genotype + genotype × environment comparison biplot showed variety CZH0616 together with other new DT hybrids to be stable and high yielding across 44 locations on-station in the ESA region compared to the commonly grown checks such as SC513. Th e new DT hybrids showed a yield advantage over the commercial check varieties both in the early and medium-late maturing categories by 4 to 19%, and the gains were bigger under stress conditions. Under farmers’ fi elds CZH0616, CZH0837, CZH0935, and CZH0928 were high yielding and stable across locations. 406-417 2017-06-27T16:23:56Z 2017-06-27T16:23:56Z 2017 Article http://hdl.handle.net/10883/18613 10.2134/agronj2015.0540 English CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF EAST ASIA SOUTHERN ASIA SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA USA American Society of Agronomy 2 109 Agronomy Journal
institution CIMMYT
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language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
MAIZE
YIELD FACTORS
ON-FARM RESEARCH
RESISTANCE VARIETIES
DROUGHT TOLERANCE
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
MAIZE
YIELD FACTORS
ON-FARM RESEARCH
RESISTANCE VARIETIES
DROUGHT TOLERANCE
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
MAIZE
YIELD FACTORS
ON-FARM RESEARCH
RESISTANCE VARIETIES
DROUGHT TOLERANCE
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
MAIZE
YIELD FACTORS
ON-FARM RESEARCH
RESISTANCE VARIETIES
DROUGHT TOLERANCE
Setimela, P.S.
Magorokosho, C.
Lunduka, R.
Gasura, E.
Makumbi, D.
Amsal Tesfaye Tarekegne
Cairns, J.E.
Thokozile Ndhlela
Erenstein, O.
Mwangi, W.M.
On-farm yield gains with Stress-Tolerant Maize in Eastern and Southern Africa
description Maize (Zea mays L.) is the most important staple food in eastern and southern Africa (ESA) with human maize consumption averaging 91 kg capita–1 yr–1. Current maize yield averages 1.2 t ha–1 and is barely suffi cient for the region’s requirements due to drought and low N stresses. Th e objective of this study was to compare new drought tolerant (DT) maize hybrids and open pollinated varieties (OPVs) against the best commercial varieties in ESA under farmer management conditions and to validate on-station results. Maize varieties were simultaneously selected on-station in four types of environments across 44 locations in ESA during the 2008/2009 and 2009/2010 seasons. During the 2010/2011 and 2011/2012 seasons, 20 promising DT maize hybrids and OPVs were selected from the on-station based on their mean grain yield and stability. Th ese selected varieties were compared with the best commercial check varieties on-farm across 80 locations in ESA in a randomized complete block design for two seasons. The genotype + genotype × environment comparison biplot showed variety CZH0616 together with other new DT hybrids to be stable and high yielding across 44 locations on-station in the ESA region compared to the commonly grown checks such as SC513. Th e new DT hybrids showed a yield advantage over the commercial check varieties both in the early and medium-late maturing categories by 4 to 19%, and the gains were bigger under stress conditions. Under farmers’ fi elds CZH0616, CZH0837, CZH0935, and CZH0928 were high yielding and stable across locations.
format Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
MAIZE
YIELD FACTORS
ON-FARM RESEARCH
RESISTANCE VARIETIES
DROUGHT TOLERANCE
author Setimela, P.S.
Magorokosho, C.
Lunduka, R.
Gasura, E.
Makumbi, D.
Amsal Tesfaye Tarekegne
Cairns, J.E.
Thokozile Ndhlela
Erenstein, O.
Mwangi, W.M.
author_facet Setimela, P.S.
Magorokosho, C.
Lunduka, R.
Gasura, E.
Makumbi, D.
Amsal Tesfaye Tarekegne
Cairns, J.E.
Thokozile Ndhlela
Erenstein, O.
Mwangi, W.M.
author_sort Setimela, P.S.
title On-farm yield gains with Stress-Tolerant Maize in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_short On-farm yield gains with Stress-Tolerant Maize in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_full On-farm yield gains with Stress-Tolerant Maize in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_fullStr On-farm yield gains with Stress-Tolerant Maize in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed On-farm yield gains with Stress-Tolerant Maize in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_sort on-farm yield gains with stress-tolerant maize in eastern and southern africa
publisher American Society of Agronomy
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/18613
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