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The effect of young Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) De Wit hedges on the growth and yield of maize, sweet potato and cowpea in an agroforestry system in Sierra Leone

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Abstract

An investigation was undertaken at Senehun — Kamajei, a high rainfall region in Sierra Leone, to assess the effects of Leucaena leucocephala, on the growth and productivity of maize, cowpea and sweet potato. The experiment was laid out in a completely randomised design with four replicates of each treatment. The treatments and controls were: (i) pure crops of maize, cowpea, sweet potato, Leucaena clean weeded and unweeded and (ii) intercrops of Leucaena with the food crops, both (iii) with and without applied fertilizers after the first year.

The growth of Leucaena was slow but nevertheless tended to reduce grain yields of maize, and tuber and vine yields of sweet potato in the rows in the immediate vicinity of the trees, especially in the nitrogen-treated plots. The maize, in particular, caused an improvement in the early height growth of the trees.

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Karim, A.B., Savill, P.S. & Rhodes, E.R. The effect of young Leucaena leucocephala (Lam) De Wit hedges on the growth and yield of maize, sweet potato and cowpea in an agroforestry system in Sierra Leone. Agroforest Syst 16, 203–211 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00119317

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