Effect of Sorghum -Mung Bean Intercropping on Sorghum -Based Cropping System in the Lowlands of North Shewa, Ethiopia

6Citations
Citations of this article
25Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Due to decreasing land units and a decline in soil fertility, integrating mung beans into the Sorghum production system is a viable option for increasing productivity and producing cash crops. The experiment was conducted during the 2017 and 2018 cropping seasons in order to evaluate the effect of a Sorghum-mung bean intercrop arrangement on a Sorghum-based cropping system that would maximize intercropping advantage without reducing Sorghum performance. The treatments were combinations of sole Sorghum, sole mung bean, one Sorghum by one mung bean row (1: 1), one Sorghum by two mung bean rows (1: 2), two Sorghum by one mung bean row (2: 1), and mixed planting of Sorghum and mung bean (50/50), which were tested in a randomized complete block design replicated four times. The highest yield reduction was observed from intercropping mixed planting (15.63%), in addition, the mean intercropped Sorghum yield showed up to12.44% reduction compared to sole stand. On the other hand, best-intercropped Sorghum yields that were produced under combinations of 2: 1 row arrangement (4.11 t·ha-1) gave a statistically similar yield to all combinations including sole stand (4.48 t·ha-1). Significant row arrangement effect showed that the row (1: 2) gave the highest yield for mung bean (0.35 t·ha-1), while the lowest was recorded from row arrangement (1: 1) (0.16 t·ha-1). The highest total LER was obtained at 1: 2 row (1.23) arrangements. The highest net return and marginal return (MRR) (341.23%) was obtained from one-row Sorghum alternated with two-row mung bean (1: 2). Therefore, farmers around the research area can get additional income from intercropping Sorghum with bean crops without adversely affecting Sorghum yield by using one-row Sorghum alternated two-row mung bean (1: 2) row arrangement.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Temeche, D., Getachew, E., Hailu, G., & Abebe, A. (2022). Effect of Sorghum -Mung Bean Intercropping on Sorghum -Based Cropping System in the Lowlands of North Shewa, Ethiopia. Advances in Agriculture, 2022. https://doi.org/10.1155/2022/6987871

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free