ON-FARM EVALUATION OF MAIZE VARIETIES AND THEIR YIELD DETERMINING FACTORS IN GHANA

S. YEBOAH1, E. OWUSU DANQUAH2, S.A. ENNIN3, P. OTENG-DARKO4, H. ASUMADU5
1CSIR-Crops Research Institute, P.O. BOX 3785, Kumasi, Ghana.
2CSIR-Crops Research Institute, P.O. BOX 3785, Kumasi, Ghana.
3CSIR-Crops Research Institute, P.O. BOX 3785, Kumasi, Ghana.
4CSIR-Crops Research Institute, P.O. BOX 3785, Kumasi, Ghana.
5CSIR-Crops Research Institute, P.O. BOX 3785, Kumasi, Ghana.

Received : 01-10-2014     Accepted : 11-11-2014     Published : 03-12-2014
Volume : 3     Issue : 2       Pages : 96 - 101
World Res J Agron 3.2 (2014):96-101

Keywords : Maize, weed density, plant density, yield, yield component.
Academic Editor : M. M. Vaughan, Gianluca Giuberti, C. Muller
Conflict of Interest : Authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Acknowledgements/Funding : This work was funded by the Australian Development Agency (AusAID) under the auspices of the West and Central African Council for Agricultural Research and Development CORAF/WECARD, in partnership with the Commonwealth Science and Industrial Agency for In

Cite - MLA : YEBOAH, S., et al "ON-FARM EVALUATION OF MAIZE VARIETIES AND THEIR YIELD DETERMINING FACTORS IN GHANA." World Research Journal of Agronomy 3.2 (2014):96-101.

Cite - APA : YEBOAH, S., OWUSU DANQUAH, E., ENNIN, S.A., OTENG-DARKO, P., ASUMADU, H. (2014). ON-FARM EVALUATION OF MAIZE VARIETIES AND THEIR YIELD DETERMINING FACTORS IN GHANA. World Research Journal of Agronomy, 3 (2), 96-101.

Cite - Chicago : YEBOAH, S., E. OWUSU DANQUAH, S.A. ENNIN, P. OTENG-DARKO, and H. ASUMADU. "ON-FARM EVALUATION OF MAIZE VARIETIES AND THEIR YIELD DETERMINING FACTORS IN GHANA." World Research Journal of Agronomy 3, no. 2 (2014):96-101.

Copyright : © 2014, S. YEBOAH, et al, Published by Bioinfo Publications. This is an subscription based article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, in which, you may not use the material for commercial purposes, you may not distribute the modified material.

Abstract

Maize is the main grain crop grown in the highlands of sub-Saharan Africa on a broad range of soil fertility and management conditions. Important yield variability has been reported at different scales reflecting the intensity and spatial distribution of growth-limiting and growth-reducing factors. Field experiments were conducted in the Forest-transition and the Guinea savanna ecology of Ghana to evaluate maize varieties and their yield determining factors. The experiments were conducted at four on-farm locations on 20 farmers’ fields in 2012 major and minor seasons. Major yield determinants were variety, soil fertility, plant density and weed density. The results showed significant difference (p<0.05) between plant height, weed density, plant density, 50% tasseling and silking. The result shows farmers with relatively good agronomic practices recorded the highest grain and stover yields. Grain yield increases as a result of observation of good agronomic practices by farmer E over farmers’ A, B, C and D (45%, 36%, 47% and 18% respectively) at Atebubu-Amantin in the major season respectively. The relative yield increase of Farmer F over farmers A, B, C, D, E, G, H, I and J at West Mamprusi were 295%, 171%, 171%, 193%, 14%, 203%, 49%, 49% and 93% respectively. The result shows positive correlation between grain yield and the traits plant height (r=0.743, p<0.05) and stover yield (r=604, p<0.05). The results shows negative correlation between grain yield and stover yield (r=-0.244) and the traits plant stand (r=-0.69, p<0.05) and weed biomass (r=-0.503, p<0.05). The results of this on-farm agronomic assessment could provide the basis for refinement of recommended cultivation practices for maize which can be used to make tentative recommendations.