Browsing by Author "Gano, Boubacar"
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Item Adaptation Responses to Early Drought Stress ofWest Africa Sorghum Varieties(MDPI, 2021-02) Gano, Boubacar; Dembele, Joseph Sékou B.; Tovignan, Thierry KlanviSorghum is the fifth most important cereal crop world-wide and feeds millions of people in the Sahel. However, it often faces early-stage water deficit due to false onsets of rainy seasons resulting in production decrease. Therefore, developing early drought tolerant material becomes a necessity but requires a good knowledge of adaptation mechanisms, which remains to be elucidated. The present study aimed at assessing the effects of early drought stress on ten elite sorghum varieties tested over two years (2018–2019) at the National Agronomic Research Centre (CNRA) of Bambey (Senegal, West Africa). Two different water regimes (well-watered and drought stress) were applied during the dry season. Water stress was applied by withholding irrigation 25 days after sowing for one month, followed by optimal irrigation until maturity. Soil moisture measurements were performed and allowed to follow the level of stress (down to a fraction of transpirable soil water (FTSW) of 0.30 at the end of stress). An agro-physio-morphological monitoring was carried out during the experiment. Results showed highly significant effects of early drought stress in sorghum plants growth by decreasing leaf appearance, biomass, height but also yield set up. The combined analysis of variance revealed highly significant differences (p 0.01) between varieties in the different environments for most characters. Under water deficit, the variability was less strong on leaf appearance and plant height at the end of stress. The adaptation responses were related to the capacity of varieties to grow up fast and complete their cycle rather, increase the dead leaves weight, reduce photosynthesis rate, stomatal conductance, leaf transpiration and increase the roots length density. However, varieties V1, V2, V8 and V9 showed promising behavior under stress and could be suitable for further application in West Africa for sorghum breeding and farmingItem Plant density and nitrogen fertilization optimization on sorghum grain yield in Mali(Wiley Periodicals LLC, 2021-09-27) Dembele, Joseph Sékou B; Gano, Boubacar; Kouressy, MamoutouSorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench], a staple food crop in Mali, has low yields for several reasons including that many farmers do not have the financial resources to purchase state-of-the-art genetics and fertilizers and information is not available on how to optimize yields for heirloom variety. To improve their economic and environmental sustainability, Mali farmers need to understand how to invest their limited resources. In many situations this involves the use of open-pollinated varieties that have a range of tillering capabilities. This study determined the best population density and nitrogen (N) fertilization combinations for eight locally available sorghum varieties. The research was conducted in 2018 and 2019 and the experimental design was split-split-plot randomized block, the treatments were two plant densities (26,600 and 53,300 plants ha–1), three N levels (0 kg ha–1, 89 kg ha–1, and 178 kg ha–1), and eight varieties that had a range of tillering characteristics. Each treatment was replicated three times and six of the varieties were open pollinated. Results showed that each variety had a different yield response to plant density and N rate. For example, the tall guinea (hybrids FADDA and PABLO) and the short durra-caudatum A12-79 cultivar produced higher yields when planted at 53,300 plants ha–1 and fertilized with 178 kg N ha–1 N2D2 treatment. For the short guinea-caudatum improved varieties C2_007-03 and C2_075-15 and caudatum GRINKAN and SOUMBA varieties the optimum seeding rate was 53,300 plants ha–1 that were fertilized with 89 kg N ha–1 (N1D2). For the tall local guinea TIEBILE variety the highest yields were observed when it was seeded at a rate of 26,600 plants ha–1 and fertilized with 89 kg N ha–1. Grain yield increase was associated with yield components and growth traits for eight varieties studied. Panicle numbers per square meter and chlorophyll index were associated with grain yield in guinea hybrid. Grain number per panicle and 1,000 grain weight were involved in increasing grain yield in caudatum varieties. Nitrogen rate and planting density combination in terms of grain yield varied with different sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] varieties studied. Knowledge of optimum combinations will help producers decide which option to promote to booster sorghum production in Mali.Item Plant density and nitrogen fertilization optimization on sorghum grain yield in Mali(Wiley Periodicals LLC, 2021-08) Dembele, Joseph Sékou B; Gano, Boubacar; Kouressy, MamoutouSorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench], a staple food crop in Mali, has low yields for several reasons including that many farmers do not have the financial resources to purchase state-of-the-art genetics and fertilizers and information is not available on how to optimize yields for heirloom variety. To improve their economic and environmental sustainability, Mali farmers need to understand how to invest their limited resources. In many situations this involves the use of open-pollinated varieties that have a range of tillering capabilities. This study determined the best population density and nitrogen (N) fertilization combinations for eight locally available sorghum varieties. The research was conducted in 2018 and 2019 and the experimental design was split-split-plot randomized block, the treatments were two plant densities (26,600 and 53,300 plants ha–1), three N levels (0 kg ha–1, 89 kg ha–1, and 178 kg ha–1), and eight varieties that had a range of tillering characteristics. Each treatment was replicated three times and six of the varieties were open pollinated. Results showed that each variety had a different yield response to plant density and N rate. For example, the tall guinea (hybrids FADDA and PABLO) and the short durra-caudatum A12-79 cultivar produced higher yields when planted at 53,300 plants ha–1 and fertilized with 178 kg N ha–1 N2D2 treatment. For the short guinea-caudatum improved varieties C2_007-03 and C2_075-15 and caudatum GRINKAN and SOUMBA varieties the optimum seeding rate was 53,300 plants ha–1 that were fertilized with 89 kg N ha–1 (N1D2). For the tall local guinea TIEBILE variety the highest yields were observed when it was seeded at a rate of 26,600 plants ha–1 and fertilized with 89 kg N ha–1. Grain yield increase was associated with yield components and growth traits for eight varieties studied. Panicle numbers per square meter and chlorophyll index were associated with grain yield in guinea hybrid. Grain number per panicle and 1,000 grain weight were involved in increasing grain yield in caudatum varieties. Nitrogen rate and planting density combination in terms of grain yield varied with different sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] varieties studied. Knowledge of optimum combinations will help producers decide which option to promote to booster sorghum production in Mali.Item Using UAV Borne, Multi-Spectral Imaging for the Field Phenotyping of Shoot Biomass, Leaf Area Index and Height of West African Sorghum Varieties under Two Contrasted Water Conditions(MDPI (Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute), 2021-04-27) Gano, Boubacar; Dembele, Joseph Sékou B; Ndour, AdamaItem Using UAV Borne, Multi-Spectral Imaging for the Field Phenotyping of Shoot Biomass, Leaf Area Index and Height of West African Sorghum Varieties under Two Contrasted Water Conditions(2021-04-27) Gano, Boubacar; Dembele, Joseph Sékou B; Ndour, Adama