Influence of insecticide spraying regimes and cultivar on insect pests and yield of cowpea in the dry savannas of northeastern Nigeria

Cowpea is an important food legume and versatile crop in the savannas of northeast Nigeria. Despite the high potential for production in this region, insect pests are a major constraint. A study was conducted to evaluate the response of diverse cowpea genotypes to different schedules of spraying with an insecticide. The study revealed that flower thrips, the legume pod borer (Maruca) and a range of pod-sucking bugs were the major insect pests. Application of insecticides once at flowering increased grain yield by 75%; application at both at flowering and podding , significantly reduced insect pest population and increased grain yield by 126%. Improved cultivars recorded a higher grain yield than the local checks at all spraying regimes. This suggests that these cultivars were either tolerant or resistant to the insect pests.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kamara, Y., Chikoye, David, Omoigui, L.O., Dugje, I.Y.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:cowpeas, genotypes, insecticide, pests, legume, cultivars, photoperiod, yield,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92179
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cgspace-10568-92179
record_format koha
spelling dig-cgspace-10568-921792023-08-03T08:11:17Z Influence of insecticide spraying regimes and cultivar on insect pests and yield of cowpea in the dry savannas of northeastern Nigeria Kamara, Y. Chikoye, David Omoigui, L.O. Dugje, I.Y. cowpeas genotypes insecticide pests legume cultivars photoperiod yield Cowpea is an important food legume and versatile crop in the savannas of northeast Nigeria. Despite the high potential for production in this region, insect pests are a major constraint. A study was conducted to evaluate the response of diverse cowpea genotypes to different schedules of spraying with an insecticide. The study revealed that flower thrips, the legume pod borer (Maruca) and a range of pod-sucking bugs were the major insect pests. Application of insecticides once at flowering increased grain yield by 75%; application at both at flowering and podding , significantly reduced insect pest population and increased grain yield by 126%. Improved cultivars recorded a higher grain yield than the local checks at all spraying regimes. This suggests that these cultivars were either tolerant or resistant to the insect pests. 2007 2018-04-24T08:40:10Z 2018-04-24T08:40:10Z Journal Article Kamara, Y., Chikoye, D., Omoigui, L.O. & Dugje, I.Y. (2007). Influence of insecticide spraying regimes and cultivar on insect pests and yield of cowpea in the dry savannas of north-eastern Nigeria. Journal of Food, Agriculture and Environment, 5(1), 154-158. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92179 en Limited Access p. 154-158
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 cowpeas
genotypes
insecticide
pests
legume
cultivars
photoperiod
yield
cowpeas
genotypes
insecticide
pests
legume
cultivars
photoperiod
yield
spellingShingle cowpeas
genotypes
insecticide
pests
legume
cultivars
photoperiod
yield
cowpeas
genotypes
insecticide
pests
legume
cultivars
photoperiod
yield
Kamara, Y.
Chikoye, David
Omoigui, L.O.
Dugje, I.Y.
Influence of insecticide spraying regimes and cultivar on insect pests and yield of cowpea in the dry savannas of northeastern Nigeria
description Cowpea is an important food legume and versatile crop in the savannas of northeast Nigeria. Despite the high potential for production in this region, insect pests are a major constraint. A study was conducted to evaluate the response of diverse cowpea genotypes to different schedules of spraying with an insecticide. The study revealed that flower thrips, the legume pod borer (Maruca) and a range of pod-sucking bugs were the major insect pests. Application of insecticides once at flowering increased grain yield by 75%; application at both at flowering and podding , significantly reduced insect pest population and increased grain yield by 126%. Improved cultivars recorded a higher grain yield than the local checks at all spraying regimes. This suggests that these cultivars were either tolerant or resistant to the insect pests.
format Journal Article
topic_facet cowpeas
genotypes
insecticide
pests
legume
cultivars
photoperiod
yield
author Kamara, Y.
Chikoye, David
Omoigui, L.O.
Dugje, I.Y.
author_facet Kamara, Y.
Chikoye, David
Omoigui, L.O.
Dugje, I.Y.
author_sort Kamara, Y.
title Influence of insecticide spraying regimes and cultivar on insect pests and yield of cowpea in the dry savannas of northeastern Nigeria
title_short Influence of insecticide spraying regimes and cultivar on insect pests and yield of cowpea in the dry savannas of northeastern Nigeria
title_full Influence of insecticide spraying regimes and cultivar on insect pests and yield of cowpea in the dry savannas of northeastern Nigeria
title_fullStr Influence of insecticide spraying regimes and cultivar on insect pests and yield of cowpea in the dry savannas of northeastern Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Influence of insecticide spraying regimes and cultivar on insect pests and yield of cowpea in the dry savannas of northeastern Nigeria
title_sort influence of insecticide spraying regimes and cultivar on insect pests and yield of cowpea in the dry savannas of northeastern nigeria
publishDate 2007
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92179
work_keys_str_mv AT kamaray influenceofinsecticidesprayingregimesandcultivaroninsectpestsandyieldofcowpeainthedrysavannasofnortheasternnigeria
AT chikoyedavid influenceofinsecticidesprayingregimesandcultivaroninsectpestsandyieldofcowpeainthedrysavannasofnortheasternnigeria
AT omoiguilo influenceofinsecticidesprayingregimesandcultivaroninsectpestsandyieldofcowpeainthedrysavannasofnortheasternnigeria
AT dugjeiy influenceofinsecticidesprayingregimesandcultivaroninsectpestsandyieldofcowpeainthedrysavannasofnortheasternnigeria
_version_ 1779062733376847872