Soil and farm management effects on yield and nutrient concentrations of food crops in East Africa

Crops that grow on soils with higher fertility often have higher yields and higher tissue nutrient concentrations. Whether this is the case for all crops, and which soil and management factors, or combinations mostly affect yields and food nutrient concentrations however, is poorly understood. Here, the main aim was to evaluate effects of soil and management factors on crop yields and food nutrient concentrations in (i) grain, fruit and tuber crops, and (ii) between high and low soil fertility areas. Total elemental concentrations of Mg, P, S, K, Ca, Fe, Zn, Mn and Cu were measured using a portable X-Ray Fluorescence Spectrometer (pXRF) in maize grain (Zea mays; Teso South, Kenya: n = 31; Kapchorwa, Uganda n = 30), cassava tuber (Manihot esculenta; Teso South: n = 27), and matooke fruit (Musa acuminata; Kapchorwa, n = 54). Soil properties measured were eCEC, total N and C, pH, texture, and total elemental content. Farm management variables (fertilisation, distance to household, and crop diversity) were collected. Canonical Correspondence Analyses (CCA) with permutation rank tests identified driving factors of alterations in nutrient concentrations. Maize grain had higher correlations with soil factors (CCA > 80%), than cassava tuber (76%) or matooke fruit (39%). In contrast, corresponding correlations to management factors were much lower (8–39%). The main soil properties affecting food nutrients were organic matter and texture. Surprisingly, pH did not play an important role. A positive association of crop diversity with nutrient concentration and yield in lower fertility areas was observed. Considering, food nutrient composition, apart from yield, as response variables in agronomic trials (e.g. fertilisation or soil improvement strategies), would contribute towards discounting the notion that crops growing on fertile soils always produce healthy and high quality foods.

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Main Authors: Fischer, S., Hilger, T., Piepho, H., Jordan, I., Karungi, J., Towett, Erick K., Shepherd, Keith D., Cadisch, G.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-05
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/111526
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.137078
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1115262023-12-08T19:36:04Z Soil and farm management effects on yield and nutrient concentrations of food crops in East Africa Fischer, S. Hilger, T. Piepho, H. Jordan, I. Karungi, J. Towett, Erick K. Shepherd, Keith D. Cadisch, G. Crops that grow on soils with higher fertility often have higher yields and higher tissue nutrient concentrations. Whether this is the case for all crops, and which soil and management factors, or combinations mostly affect yields and food nutrient concentrations however, is poorly understood. Here, the main aim was to evaluate effects of soil and management factors on crop yields and food nutrient concentrations in (i) grain, fruit and tuber crops, and (ii) between high and low soil fertility areas. Total elemental concentrations of Mg, P, S, K, Ca, Fe, Zn, Mn and Cu were measured using a portable X-Ray Fluorescence Spectrometer (pXRF) in maize grain (Zea mays; Teso South, Kenya: n = 31; Kapchorwa, Uganda n = 30), cassava tuber (Manihot esculenta; Teso South: n = 27), and matooke fruit (Musa acuminata; Kapchorwa, n = 54). Soil properties measured were eCEC, total N and C, pH, texture, and total elemental content. Farm management variables (fertilisation, distance to household, and crop diversity) were collected. Canonical Correspondence Analyses (CCA) with permutation rank tests identified driving factors of alterations in nutrient concentrations. Maize grain had higher correlations with soil factors (CCA > 80%), than cassava tuber (76%) or matooke fruit (39%). In contrast, corresponding correlations to management factors were much lower (8–39%). The main soil properties affecting food nutrients were organic matter and texture. Surprisingly, pH did not play an important role. A positive association of crop diversity with nutrient concentration and yield in lower fertility areas was observed. Considering, food nutrient composition, apart from yield, as response variables in agronomic trials (e.g. fertilisation or soil improvement strategies), would contribute towards discounting the notion that crops growing on fertile soils always produce healthy and high quality foods. 2020-05 2021-02-23T11:34:01Z 2021-02-23T11:34:01Z Journal Article Fischer, S.; Hilger, T.; Piepho, H.; Jordan, I.; Karungi, J.; Towett, E.; Shepherd, K.; Cadisch, G. 2020. Soil and farm management effects on yield and nutrient concentrations of food crops in East Africa. Science of the Total Environment 716 (2020) 137078. 0048-9697 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/111526 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.137078 Restoring Degraded Landscapes en Copyrighted; all rights reserved Limited Access 716 (2020) 137078 Elsevier Science of The Total Environment
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region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
description Crops that grow on soils with higher fertility often have higher yields and higher tissue nutrient concentrations. Whether this is the case for all crops, and which soil and management factors, or combinations mostly affect yields and food nutrient concentrations however, is poorly understood. Here, the main aim was to evaluate effects of soil and management factors on crop yields and food nutrient concentrations in (i) grain, fruit and tuber crops, and (ii) between high and low soil fertility areas. Total elemental concentrations of Mg, P, S, K, Ca, Fe, Zn, Mn and Cu were measured using a portable X-Ray Fluorescence Spectrometer (pXRF) in maize grain (Zea mays; Teso South, Kenya: n = 31; Kapchorwa, Uganda n = 30), cassava tuber (Manihot esculenta; Teso South: n = 27), and matooke fruit (Musa acuminata; Kapchorwa, n = 54). Soil properties measured were eCEC, total N and C, pH, texture, and total elemental content. Farm management variables (fertilisation, distance to household, and crop diversity) were collected. Canonical Correspondence Analyses (CCA) with permutation rank tests identified driving factors of alterations in nutrient concentrations. Maize grain had higher correlations with soil factors (CCA > 80%), than cassava tuber (76%) or matooke fruit (39%). In contrast, corresponding correlations to management factors were much lower (8–39%). The main soil properties affecting food nutrients were organic matter and texture. Surprisingly, pH did not play an important role. A positive association of crop diversity with nutrient concentration and yield in lower fertility areas was observed. Considering, food nutrient composition, apart from yield, as response variables in agronomic trials (e.g. fertilisation or soil improvement strategies), would contribute towards discounting the notion that crops growing on fertile soils always produce healthy and high quality foods.
format Journal Article
author Fischer, S.
Hilger, T.
Piepho, H.
Jordan, I.
Karungi, J.
Towett, Erick K.
Shepherd, Keith D.
Cadisch, G.
spellingShingle Fischer, S.
Hilger, T.
Piepho, H.
Jordan, I.
Karungi, J.
Towett, Erick K.
Shepherd, Keith D.
Cadisch, G.
Soil and farm management effects on yield and nutrient concentrations of food crops in East Africa
author_facet Fischer, S.
Hilger, T.
Piepho, H.
Jordan, I.
Karungi, J.
Towett, Erick K.
Shepherd, Keith D.
Cadisch, G.
author_sort Fischer, S.
title Soil and farm management effects on yield and nutrient concentrations of food crops in East Africa
title_short Soil and farm management effects on yield and nutrient concentrations of food crops in East Africa
title_full Soil and farm management effects on yield and nutrient concentrations of food crops in East Africa
title_fullStr Soil and farm management effects on yield and nutrient concentrations of food crops in East Africa
title_full_unstemmed Soil and farm management effects on yield and nutrient concentrations of food crops in East Africa
title_sort soil and farm management effects on yield and nutrient concentrations of food crops in east africa
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2020-05
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/111526
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.137078
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