“…In addition, a field experiment was conducted to evaluate the growth, productivity, and economics of cabbage in the grid zone as influenced by different levels of zinc and sulfur reported that growth parameters such as plant height, plant spread, number of leaves per plant at all crop growth stages, yield attributing characters, length and diameter of head and weight per head, cabbage yield per hectare net return, and benefit cost ratio increased with increasing levels of sulfur from 20 to 80 kg/ha and zinc from 2 to 8 kg/ha and the crop responded only up to 60 kg S/ ha and 6 kg Zn/ha [ 61 , 62 ]. During a 2017 experiment in Ghana's Kintampo North Municipality, evaluating cabbage response to various soil amendments from August to November, poultry manure matched NPK (15-15-15) and outperformed other treatments across all measured parameters, while cow dung and goat manure also exhibited promising results [ 63 , 64 ]. Likewise, a field experiment conducted to determine the optimum combination of FYM and biofertilizers for improving the growth, yield, and quality attributes of Chinese cabbage under high-altitude rain-fed climatic conditions reported that among the treatments studied, the highest plant height (33.33 cm), number of wrapper leaves/plant (18.00), plant spread/plant (111.66 cm), head weight/plant (553.33 g), yield/plot (15.49 kg), yield/ha 34.42 tons, moisture content 98.00%, and vitamin C 28 mg/100 g were observed with the application of FYM at 25 tons/ha along with an azotobactor and phosphate-solubilizing bacteria [ 65 ].…”