IITA scientists develop new crop spacing method for cowpea
Scientists at the International
Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Ibadan, have recommended a
new spacing procedure for cowpea cultivation which, if adopted, could
give farmers huge harvests.
IITA’s Communication Specialist, Mrs
Adaobi Umeokoro, disclosed this via a statement on Thursday in
Ibadan.
The statement said that the new crop
spacing technique was the outcome result of a study on the effects of
plant density on cowpea performance in the Savannah areas of Nigeria.
It said that the study was conducted at
the IITA Experimental Stations in Kano and Zaria during the 2013 and
2014 growing seasons.
“The study addressed the need to
devise a viable alternative that would help limit the bottlenecks
which farmers undergo in cultivating cowpea.
“It looked at the large disparity in
farmers’ yield (0.3 Mg/ha) and yield obtainable on experimental
plots (1.5 to 2.5 Mg/ha) and proposed simple agronomic practices that
could help reverse the trend.
“By simply adjusting plant density,
researchers found that grain yield significantly improved from 1.20
Mg/ha for a density of 133,333 plants per hectare to 2.16 Mg/ha for a
density of 400,000 plants per hectare.
“Yield also increased by 68 per cent
when planted at a density of 266,666 plants/ha and 79 per cent when
planted at a density of 400,000 plants/ha,” it said.
The statement said that the findings
could potentially benefit over 20 million people in West and Central
Africa who depended on cowpea cultivation for their livelihood.
“The study explains that in addition
to planting improved cowpea varieties, farmers must immediately
change from using the current 75 by 20 cm spacing with two seeds
planted per stand.
“They should change to double or
triple rows on ridges spaced 75 cm apart to achieve corresponding
densities of 266,666 and 400,000 plants per ha respectively.
“According to the study, these
densities gave higher crop performance in terms of light
interception, biomass production, yield and yield components.
“Since cowpea, like any other grain
crop in northern Nigeria, is grown on ridges spaced 75 cm apart, the
only option to increase plant density is to increase the number of
rows planted per ridge from 1 to 2 or 3 rows,” it said.
Besides, the statement said that
smallholder farmers could increase cowpea grain and fodder yields if
they adopted a density of 266,666 plants or more per hectare in
cowpea cultivation.
“The study was conducted by IITA’s
Alpha Kamara, Abdullahi Tofa, Stephen Kyei-Boahen, Reuben Solomon,
Nkeki Kamai, Hakeem Ajeigbe from the International Crop Research
Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT),” it added.
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