Organic and inorganic fertilizer for vegetable production under tropical conditions

The use of commercial organic fertilizer is being encouraged in place of inorganic fertilizer in soil fertility improvement in Oyo State of Nigeria. This study was designed to determine if switching to from inorganic to organic fertilizer could be profitable. We took a case study of users of commercial organic fertilizer (UCOF) and users of inorganic fertilizer (UIF) in vegetable production. Nested sampling technique was used in selecting UCOF and UIF. Primary data on quantities and prices of vegetable production inputs and output were collected and analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics, partial budgetary technique and importance ranking. Results indicated both the UCOF and UIF used less than the recommended quantities of fertilizer and obtained less than the optimal yield. However, the UCOF on the average used more level of organic fertilizer that supply more soil nutrient though at higher cost. Yet they obtained higher vegetable yield (9169 kg?ha-1) and a marginal rate of return of 229%. However, either a marginal 2.6% decrease in each of yield or price of vegetable or a 32.4% increase in price of commercial organic fertilizer will make commercial organic fertilizer technology not superior to inorganic fertilizer. The identified constraints to the use of commercial organic fertilizer by UIF in descending order of importance are offensive odour, doubtful efficacy, heavy weed infestation, unavailability and bulkiness of commercial organic fertilizer which if eliminated will boost the demand for and allow the enjoyment of the additional benefits of commercial organic fertilizer.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alimi, T., Ajewole, O.C., Olubode-Awosola, O.O., Idowu, E.O.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:vegetables, organic fertilizers, inorganic fertilizers, constraints, soil degradation, farm size, yields, sensitivity analysis,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40809
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-408092023-06-13T04:34:51Z Organic and inorganic fertilizer for vegetable production under tropical conditions Alimi, T. Ajewole, O.C. Olubode-Awosola, O.O. Idowu, E.O. vegetables organic fertilizers inorganic fertilizers constraints soil degradation farm size yields sensitivity analysis The use of commercial organic fertilizer is being encouraged in place of inorganic fertilizer in soil fertility improvement in Oyo State of Nigeria. This study was designed to determine if switching to from inorganic to organic fertilizer could be profitable. We took a case study of users of commercial organic fertilizer (UCOF) and users of inorganic fertilizer (UIF) in vegetable production. Nested sampling technique was used in selecting UCOF and UIF. Primary data on quantities and prices of vegetable production inputs and output were collected and analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics, partial budgetary technique and importance ranking. Results indicated both the UCOF and UIF used less than the recommended quantities of fertilizer and obtained less than the optimal yield. However, the UCOF on the average used more level of organic fertilizer that supply more soil nutrient though at higher cost. Yet they obtained higher vegetable yield (9169 kg?ha-1) and a marginal rate of return of 229%. However, either a marginal 2.6% decrease in each of yield or price of vegetable or a 32.4% increase in price of commercial organic fertilizer will make commercial organic fertilizer technology not superior to inorganic fertilizer. The identified constraints to the use of commercial organic fertilizer by UIF in descending order of importance are offensive odour, doubtful efficacy, heavy weed infestation, unavailability and bulkiness of commercial organic fertilizer which if eliminated will boost the demand for and allow the enjoyment of the additional benefits of commercial organic fertilizer. 2007 2014-06-13T14:48:29Z 2014-06-13T14:48:29Z Journal Article Alimi, T.; Ajewole, O. C.; Olubode-Awosola, O. O.; Idowu, E. O. 2007. Organic and inorganic fertilizer for vegetable production under tropical conditions. Journal of Agricultural and Rural Development, 1:120-136. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40809 en Limited Access p. 120-136
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic vegetables
organic fertilizers
inorganic fertilizers
constraints
soil degradation
farm size
yields
sensitivity analysis
vegetables
organic fertilizers
inorganic fertilizers
constraints
soil degradation
farm size
yields
sensitivity analysis
spellingShingle vegetables
organic fertilizers
inorganic fertilizers
constraints
soil degradation
farm size
yields
sensitivity analysis
vegetables
organic fertilizers
inorganic fertilizers
constraints
soil degradation
farm size
yields
sensitivity analysis
Alimi, T.
Ajewole, O.C.
Olubode-Awosola, O.O.
Idowu, E.O.
Organic and inorganic fertilizer for vegetable production under tropical conditions
description The use of commercial organic fertilizer is being encouraged in place of inorganic fertilizer in soil fertility improvement in Oyo State of Nigeria. This study was designed to determine if switching to from inorganic to organic fertilizer could be profitable. We took a case study of users of commercial organic fertilizer (UCOF) and users of inorganic fertilizer (UIF) in vegetable production. Nested sampling technique was used in selecting UCOF and UIF. Primary data on quantities and prices of vegetable production inputs and output were collected and analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics, partial budgetary technique and importance ranking. Results indicated both the UCOF and UIF used less than the recommended quantities of fertilizer and obtained less than the optimal yield. However, the UCOF on the average used more level of organic fertilizer that supply more soil nutrient though at higher cost. Yet they obtained higher vegetable yield (9169 kg?ha-1) and a marginal rate of return of 229%. However, either a marginal 2.6% decrease in each of yield or price of vegetable or a 32.4% increase in price of commercial organic fertilizer will make commercial organic fertilizer technology not superior to inorganic fertilizer. The identified constraints to the use of commercial organic fertilizer by UIF in descending order of importance are offensive odour, doubtful efficacy, heavy weed infestation, unavailability and bulkiness of commercial organic fertilizer which if eliminated will boost the demand for and allow the enjoyment of the additional benefits of commercial organic fertilizer.
format Journal Article
topic_facet vegetables
organic fertilizers
inorganic fertilizers
constraints
soil degradation
farm size
yields
sensitivity analysis
author Alimi, T.
Ajewole, O.C.
Olubode-Awosola, O.O.
Idowu, E.O.
author_facet Alimi, T.
Ajewole, O.C.
Olubode-Awosola, O.O.
Idowu, E.O.
author_sort Alimi, T.
title Organic and inorganic fertilizer for vegetable production under tropical conditions
title_short Organic and inorganic fertilizer for vegetable production under tropical conditions
title_full Organic and inorganic fertilizer for vegetable production under tropical conditions
title_fullStr Organic and inorganic fertilizer for vegetable production under tropical conditions
title_full_unstemmed Organic and inorganic fertilizer for vegetable production under tropical conditions
title_sort organic and inorganic fertilizer for vegetable production under tropical conditions
publishDate 2007
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40809
work_keys_str_mv AT alimit organicandinorganicfertilizerforvegetableproductionundertropicalconditions
AT ajewoleoc organicandinorganicfertilizerforvegetableproductionundertropicalconditions
AT olubodeawosolaoo organicandinorganicfertilizerforvegetableproductionundertropicalconditions
AT idowueo organicandinorganicfertilizerforvegetableproductionundertropicalconditions
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