2008
DOI: 10.1007/s10333-008-0123-0
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Evaluation of sawah rice management system in an inland valley in southeastern Nigeria. I: Soil chemical properties and rice yield

Abstract: Failures in agricultural development in parts of West Africa may have been caused by the inability of the farmers to develop the abundant inland valleys for cultivation of such crops like rice, using appropriate water management systems. An inland valley in southeastern Nigeria was used to evaluate the influence of sawah and non-sawah water management using inorganic and organic soil amendments on the soil chemical properties and rice grain yield. Soil chemical properties tested were soil organic carbon, total… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…The sawah systems could thus be a means of coping with the low fertility status of inlandvalley soils. Nwite et al (2008) also reported higher soil exchangeable bases under sawah compared to nonsawah systems in a lowland soil in southeastern Nigeria. Owing to the positive correlation between SOC and exchangeable bases in West African inland valleys (Issaka et al, 1997), the NSP would by virtue of its high SOC content be expected to also be rich in exchangeable bases.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…The sawah systems could thus be a means of coping with the low fertility status of inlandvalley soils. Nwite et al (2008) also reported higher soil exchangeable bases under sawah compared to nonsawah systems in a lowland soil in southeastern Nigeria. Owing to the positive correlation between SOC and exchangeable bases in West African inland valleys (Issaka et al, 1997), the NSP would by virtue of its high SOC content be expected to also be rich in exchangeable bases.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Apart from not conforming to any specific textural attribute, West African lowlands exhibit diverse hydrological conditions. Yet, the sawah technology enhances rice yield under such scenarios in the region (Asubonteng et al, 2001;Buri et al, 2008;Nwite et al, 2008). Attempts to edaphologically explain such yield benefits due to the sawah system focused only on other beneficial attributes of the system, such as enhancement of soil chemical and fertility properties and good water control (Nwite et al, 2008;Issaka et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The superiority of sawah systems over traditional rice (Oryza sativa L.) culture in West Africa is no longer debatable (Nwite et al, 2008;Obalum et al, 2012;Ofori et al, 2005). Sawah is a term adopted from Indonesia referring to an ecologically engineered lowland rice field, one that is properly demarcated using bunds, puddled, leveled and rowtransplanted to a high-yielding variety and, thereafter, kept under regulated flooding and routine fertilization.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lately, the research has been focused on reducing the cost of the system for enhanced acceptability to farmers. However, most of the studies in this regard concentrated on alternative fertilization strategies (Buri et al, 2004(Buri et al, , 2008Nwite et al, 2008Nwite et al, , 2011. Under the sawah system, land preparation using a hand-operated power tiller is routinely done.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%