Abstract

The present study investigates the effect of intercropping (maize-cowpea, maize-okra, maize-okra-cowpea, okra-cowpea) compared to insecticide application on the level of infestation of insect pests and the final yield of maize, cowpea and okra. Field experiments were conducted during the 2016 and 2017 cropping seasons in the Guinean Savannah (Dang-Ngaoundere) and Sudano Sahelian (Gouna-Garoua) agro-ecological zones in Cameroon. Our experimental design was a split plot arrangement in a randomized complete block with four replications. The main factor was assigned to the use of insecticide (Cypermethrin) and sub plots were devoted for cropping systems. We compared the efficiency of intercropping to that of Cypermethrin application on the Yield of maize, cowpea and okra as influenced by insect pest damages. The comparison of monocropped sprayed by Cypermethrin to unsprayed showed that, in Dang, insect pests reduced maize yield by 37% and 24% in 2016 and 2017, respectively, whereas in Gouna, it was lower than 8% during the both years. Reduction in seed yield by insect pests on cowpea in Dang represented 47% and 50% in 2016 and 2017, respectively, whereas in Gouna, it was 55% and 63% in 2016 and 2017, respectively. For okra, insect pests reduced okra fruit yield by 25% and 44% in Dang and 23% and 28% in Gouna, respectively, in 2016 and 2017. Crop yield was lower in intercropping compared to monoculture due to competition of plants in association on different resources. Considering the total yields obtained from each intercropping, intercropping trials resulted generally in higher yields compared to mono-culture (LER > 1) in both sites and years but the respective yields were quite different. On the basis of the results obtained, we recommend maize-cowpea intercropping as a sustainable solution to reduce the infestation level of their pest insects.

Highlights

  • The loss of crop due to insect pests remains quite high worldwide

  • This difference might be the result of lower soil pH and higher insect pest infestation observed at Dang

  • Unprotected maize plots at Dang suffered more from the activity of insect pests which results in the decreasing seed yield

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Summary

Introduction

The loss of crop due to insect pests remains quite high worldwide. Insect pests are reported to be responsible for destroying 20% of the world’s total crop production annually [1]. 3.5 billion kg of chemical pesticides are used annually in the world [2]. This represents an annual investment of 40 billion US dollars that cannot be used by farmers for their health and others. Chemical insecticides are reported to be unfriendly to the environment and pose health hazards to humans which result from, among others things, their neurotoxicity, reproductive toxicity, and cancerogeneity [3,4,5,6]. Intercropping has been proposed as a solution to prevent the environment and farmers from the effects of chemical pesticides [7,8,9]

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