Biomass production and nutrient content of three agroforestry tree species growing on an acid Anthropic Ferralsol under recurrent harvesting at different cutting heights
Agroforestry systems may alleviate challenges relating to soil degradation and low livestock production for smallholder farmers. Species-adjusted management regimes will determine how agroforestry fits in farming systems. Long-term productivity of biomass in agroforestry systems managed for fodder p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Agroforestry systems 2020-06, Vol.94 (3), p.857-867 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Agroforestry systems may alleviate challenges relating to soil degradation and low livestock production for smallholder farmers. Species-adjusted management regimes will determine how agroforestry fits in farming systems. Long-term productivity of biomass in agroforestry systems managed for fodder production requires tree species that coppice after repeated cutting. This study evaluated the effect of different cutting heights (0.3 and 1.0 m) and repeated harvests (1–5) on biomass production and chemical composition of the leguminous trees
Acacia angustissima
,
Leucaena pallida
and
Mimosa scabrella
in a field study on an Anthropic Ferralsol in Southern Rwanda. Shoot biomass production was highest at 0.3 m cutting height for
A. angustissima
and
L
.
pallida
, but
M. scabrella
could not survive that cutting height. Shoot biomass was highest for
A. angustissima
and lowest for
M. scabrella
, which did not adapt to repeated harvests. Leaf:stem ratio was not affected by cutting height. Cutting height did not affect crude protein (CP), but neutral detergent fibre (NDF), acid detergent fibre (ADF) and total polyphenol (TP) concentrations were higher at 1.0 m cutting height than at 0.3 m. Crude protein was highest in
A. angustissima
and lowest in
M. scabrella
, while NDF and ADF were highest in
M. scabrella.
Although all species provided high feed quality in terms of high CP content at both cutting heights, low cutting height (0.3 m) is recommended for
A. angustissima
and
L. pallida
for higher overall quality and biomass production. |
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ISSN: | 0167-4366 1572-9680 1572-9680 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10457-019-00455-8 |