Underplanting oil palm with cocoa in Ghana

Mature oil palms at the Oil Palm Research Institute at Kusi, Ghana were underplanted with cocoa to study the feasibility of mixed cropping of the two crops under West African conditions. The oil palm trees in this trial were planted in 1970 and had achieved maximum canopy formation. Three triangular spacings of the oil palms used were 8.7, 9.9 and 10.5 m. The cocoa was underplanted in June 1988 at spacing of 2.4 m triangular using mixed hybrids. There were no significant differences in oil palm yield between plots with cocoa and the controls. There was no appreciable damage to the cocoa trees from falling palm fronds and fruits during harvesting or pruning. Cocoa seedling growth and yield were significant better under the oil palm spaced at 9.9 or 10.5 m triangular than under oil palm spaced at 8.7 m triangular.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 42527 Amoah, F.M., 99886 Nuertey, B.N., 45719 Baidoo Addo, K., 101275 Oppong, F.K., 101924 Osei Bonsu, K., 44687 Asamoah, T.E.O. autores/as
Format: biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Amsterdam (Países Bajos): Springer, 1995
Subjects:THEOBROMA CACAO, ELAEIS GUINEENSIS, PHYTOPHTHORA PALMIVORA, AGROFORESTERIA, CULTIVO MIXTO, CARACTERISTICAS DEL RODAL, GHANA, AFRICA OCCIDENTAL,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00705215
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