2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2006.02.003
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Farmers' knowledge of soils in relation to cropping practices: A case study of farmers in upland rice based slash-and-burn systems of northern Laos

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Cited by 69 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…As was observed in this study, indica varieties in the tropics had in common vigorous tillering traits with small-sized grains (Takahashi 1984). Most farmers believed that the small-grain variety can adapt well to poor soils (Saito et al 2006c). In a germplasm survey where 244 accessions were collected from northern, central and southern Laos, Asai et al (2016) also found from their collected dataset that good tillering ability and small grain size were significantly effective indicators of genotypic adaptability to infertile soil conditions.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As was observed in this study, indica varieties in the tropics had in common vigorous tillering traits with small-sized grains (Takahashi 1984). Most farmers believed that the small-grain variety can adapt well to poor soils (Saito et al 2006c). In a germplasm survey where 244 accessions were collected from northern, central and southern Laos, Asai et al (2016) also found from their collected dataset that good tillering ability and small grain size were significantly effective indicators of genotypic adaptability to infertile soil conditions.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
“…Alternative options could be the production of Job's tears in place of maize. The good adaptability to infertile soil conditions and stable yield performance was also recognized by upland farmers with local indigenous knowledge (Saito et al 2006c). Furthermore, upland farmers also regard Job's tear as a crop that requires minimal care for weeding (Douangsavanh & Bouahom 2006).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Much of this is well-researched and scholarly work, and fulfils a pressing need to document fully locally-based indigenous knowledge repertoires, but it sometimes can be overly descriptive and too place-specific to be of much wider development value. A second theme, perhaps being promoted as a means of trying to bring IK more into the centre of development practice, has involved work which attempts to validate IK through the use of scientific testing methods (see, for example, Jacobson and Stephens, 2009;Mairura et al, 2008;Saito et al, 2006;Trung et al, 2008). The problem here is that there is the often unsaid assumption that IK can only really be taken seriously when it has the seal of approval of formal science.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, no improved upland rice cultivars have been released in this region (Saito et al, 2007). The labor requirement for weeding is typically 150 d ha -1 and about 50% of the total labor input (Roder et al, 1997;Saito et al, 2006a). Saito et al (2006a) reported that in the fi rst two months of the rice growing season, the total labor input was 107 d ha -1 , indicating that two persons have to weed continuously during the fi rst two months (average fi eld size is about 1 ha for rice).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The labor requirement for weeding is typically 150 d ha -1 and about 50% of the total labor input (Roder et al, 1997;Saito et al, 2006a). Saito et al (2006a) reported that in the fi rst two months of the rice growing season, the total labor input was 107 d ha -1 , indicating that two persons have to weed continuously during the fi rst two months (average fi eld size is about 1 ha for rice). The two months after rice seeding include a highly critical period for weed competition, when weeds have the greatest effect on rice growth (van Heemst, 1985; 【Short Report】 Fig.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%