Extent and causes of low yield in maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid areas of Zimbabwe

Diagnostic work was undertaken during 1987-91 to determine the area of maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid (Natural Regions 2 and 3) communal areas of Zimbabwe, the grain yield losses encountered, and the causes of the low yield. From a survey of 10 communal areas in 1989-90 it was estimated that smallholders in Natural Regions 2 and 3 planted around 175,000 ha of maize four ou more weeks after the start of maize plantings. This represents some 32.9% of the total maize area planted in sub-humid communal areas each year. From detailed agronomic monitoring in Mangwende Communal Area during 1987-88 and 1988-89, the first quartile of fields planted (mean planting date 14 November) averaged a grain yield of 4.9 t ha against only 1.1 t ha for the last quartile of fields planted (mean of 22 December). This was equivalent to around 310,000 t of maize grain foregone each year in sub-humid parts of Zimbabwe because of late planting. Observations on farmers' fields in Mangwende, confirmed in a on-station experiment at Harare, showed that the early plantings, with two to three more emerged leaves at any time up to five fewer days to tassel emergence. Many minor and several major input and management differences were noted for late plantings versus early plantings. Input and management differences likely to be major contributors to the low grain yield of late planted maize were: 1) delayed application of basal fertilizer (by around six days, three leaves later) at a reduced rate (around 20 kg ha N, 15 kg ha P only); 2) topdress N fertilizer was applied at just 60% of the rate given to early plantings, and two leaves later in crop development; and 3) the late planted crop suffered weed competition longer than did early plantings, with greater weed burden at planting, and was first weeded at the -ñeaf stage (four leaves later than with first plantings). The diagnostic results reported here proved useful in planning a research project to generate technologies to improve the productivity of late planted maize in Zimbabwe.

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Main Authors: Waddington, S.R., Mudhara, M., Hlatshwayo, M.D., Kunjeku, P.
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CIMMYT 1991
Subjects:Diagnostic Work, Smallholder Farmers, Maize Plantings, Pre-Tasselling, AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/1386
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-13862021-03-31T14:21:08Z Extent and causes of low yield in maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid areas of Zimbabwe Waddington, S.R. Mudhara, M. Hlatshwayo, M.D. Kunjeku, P. Diagnostic Work Smallholder Farmers Maize Plantings Pre-Tasselling AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY Diagnostic work was undertaken during 1987-91 to determine the area of maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid (Natural Regions 2 and 3) communal areas of Zimbabwe, the grain yield losses encountered, and the causes of the low yield. From a survey of 10 communal areas in 1989-90 it was estimated that smallholders in Natural Regions 2 and 3 planted around 175,000 ha of maize four ou more weeks after the start of maize plantings. This represents some 32.9% of the total maize area planted in sub-humid communal areas each year. From detailed agronomic monitoring in Mangwende Communal Area during 1987-88 and 1988-89, the first quartile of fields planted (mean planting date 14 November) averaged a grain yield of 4.9 t ha against only 1.1 t ha for the last quartile of fields planted (mean of 22 December). This was equivalent to around 310,000 t of maize grain foregone each year in sub-humid parts of Zimbabwe because of late planting. Observations on farmers' fields in Mangwende, confirmed in a on-station experiment at Harare, showed that the early plantings, with two to three more emerged leaves at any time up to five fewer days to tassel emergence. Many minor and several major input and management differences were noted for late plantings versus early plantings. Input and management differences likely to be major contributors to the low grain yield of late planted maize were: 1) delayed application of basal fertilizer (by around six days, three leaves later) at a reduced rate (around 20 kg ha N, 15 kg ha P only); 2) topdress N fertilizer was applied at just 60% of the rate given to early plantings, and two leaves later in crop development; and 3) the late planted crop suffered weed competition longer than did early plantings, with greater weed burden at planting, and was first weeded at the -ñeaf stage (four leaves later than with first plantings). The diagnostic results reported here proved useful in planning a research project to generate technologies to improve the productivity of late planted maize in Zimbabwe. 15-31 2013-06-05T15:45:17Z 2013-06-05T15:45:17Z 1991 Article 0187-828X ISSN: 0187-828X http://hdl.handle.net/10883/1386 English CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF Zimbabwe CIMMYT 9 Farming Systems Bulletin Eastern and Southern Africa
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic Diagnostic Work
Smallholder Farmers
Maize Plantings
Pre-Tasselling
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Diagnostic Work
Smallholder Farmers
Maize Plantings
Pre-Tasselling
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
spellingShingle Diagnostic Work
Smallholder Farmers
Maize Plantings
Pre-Tasselling
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Diagnostic Work
Smallholder Farmers
Maize Plantings
Pre-Tasselling
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Waddington, S.R.
Mudhara, M.
Hlatshwayo, M.D.
Kunjeku, P.
Extent and causes of low yield in maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid areas of Zimbabwe
description Diagnostic work was undertaken during 1987-91 to determine the area of maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid (Natural Regions 2 and 3) communal areas of Zimbabwe, the grain yield losses encountered, and the causes of the low yield. From a survey of 10 communal areas in 1989-90 it was estimated that smallholders in Natural Regions 2 and 3 planted around 175,000 ha of maize four ou more weeks after the start of maize plantings. This represents some 32.9% of the total maize area planted in sub-humid communal areas each year. From detailed agronomic monitoring in Mangwende Communal Area during 1987-88 and 1988-89, the first quartile of fields planted (mean planting date 14 November) averaged a grain yield of 4.9 t ha against only 1.1 t ha for the last quartile of fields planted (mean of 22 December). This was equivalent to around 310,000 t of maize grain foregone each year in sub-humid parts of Zimbabwe because of late planting. Observations on farmers' fields in Mangwende, confirmed in a on-station experiment at Harare, showed that the early plantings, with two to three more emerged leaves at any time up to five fewer days to tassel emergence. Many minor and several major input and management differences were noted for late plantings versus early plantings. Input and management differences likely to be major contributors to the low grain yield of late planted maize were: 1) delayed application of basal fertilizer (by around six days, three leaves later) at a reduced rate (around 20 kg ha N, 15 kg ha P only); 2) topdress N fertilizer was applied at just 60% of the rate given to early plantings, and two leaves later in crop development; and 3) the late planted crop suffered weed competition longer than did early plantings, with greater weed burden at planting, and was first weeded at the -ñeaf stage (four leaves later than with first plantings). The diagnostic results reported here proved useful in planning a research project to generate technologies to improve the productivity of late planted maize in Zimbabwe.
format Article
topic_facet Diagnostic Work
Smallholder Farmers
Maize Plantings
Pre-Tasselling
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
author Waddington, S.R.
Mudhara, M.
Hlatshwayo, M.D.
Kunjeku, P.
author_facet Waddington, S.R.
Mudhara, M.
Hlatshwayo, M.D.
Kunjeku, P.
author_sort Waddington, S.R.
title Extent and causes of low yield in maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid areas of Zimbabwe
title_short Extent and causes of low yield in maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid areas of Zimbabwe
title_full Extent and causes of low yield in maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid areas of Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Extent and causes of low yield in maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid areas of Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Extent and causes of low yield in maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid areas of Zimbabwe
title_sort extent and causes of low yield in maize planted late by smallholder farmers in sub-humid areas of zimbabwe
publisher CIMMYT
publishDate 1991
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/1386
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