Dalbato, Abitew Lagibo
- Department of Crop Production Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2019Peer reviewedOpen access
Bosha, Abraham; Dalbato, Abitew Lagibo; Tana, Tamado; Mohammed, Wassu; Tesfaye, Bizuayehu; Karlsson, Laila M.
Ensete ventricosum (enset) has been cultivated in Ethiopia since ancient times. It is a multipurpose, drought tolerant and food security crop. When burying enset corms for vegetative propagation, manure is usually placed on the soil surface. However, there is no research-based evidence to justify this practice. We hypothesised that enset sucker production would be enhanced by placing manure in the corm burial hole. We tested this hypothesis, investigated manure application rates per buried corm and tested the effect of supplying a small amount of inorganic fertilizer. Three enset cultivars (Endale, Gewada and Yanbule) were used. Ninety corm halves were buried in separate holes (N = 3), resulting in 1,389 individually recorded suckers. There were significantly more suckers and a larger total biomass when manure was placed with the corm than when spread on the top of the soil, thus corroborating the main hypothesis. The number of suckers and the biomass increased with increasing amounts of air-dried cow manure up to 4.0 kg DW per burial hole, while the size of the three largest suckers per buried corm increased further with 6.0 kg DW of manure. Supplying a smaller amount of manure (2.0 kg DW) or equal nitrogen amount from inorganic fertilizer increased the production, compared to the treatment with no fertilizer. In conclusion, we recommend that farmers should ideally bury the corm with 7-11 dm(3) of air-dried pulverized manure, thoroughly mixed with field soil; if manure is in short supply, burying even a small amount of it with the corm is beneficial.
Ethiopia; fertilization; food security; kocho; manure; planting technique; vegetative propagation
Folia Horticulturae
2019, Volume: 31, number: 1, pages: 171-180 Publisher: POLISH SOC HORTICULTURAL SCI
SDG2 Zero hunger
Horticulture
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/fhort-2019-0012
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/101064