Abstract:
A pot experiment was conducted under green-house condition to evaluate the growth and
yield of tomato, cowpea, and bush bean under mono-cropping and intercropping and soil
microbial activity.
Six different crop combinations; Tomato (Ti), Cowpea (T2), Bush bean (T3), Cowpea
+ Tomato (T4), Bush bean + Tomato (T5), Cowpea + Bush bean (T6) were tested @ two
plants/pot (30cm diameter). Complete Randomized Design (CRD) with three replicates
was used. Statistical analysis was carried out using the Student Newman-Kuells Means
Separation Test of SAS program (9.i.3).Number of flowers, number of fruits/pods, fruit/
seed weight, number of leaves, number of root nodules per plant and plant height were
pleasured. Soil microbial activity was measured according to the CO2 evolution method.
Tomato grew better when intercropped with cowpea or bush bean Qegumes) than a
mono-crop. Significantly higher yield were recorded from tomato when grown with bush
bean (45%)and cowpea (15%) as compared to mono-cropped plants. Significantly higher
yield (106%) was recorded in cowpea when growing with tomato as comparing to monocropped
cowpea. Bush bean, produced 35% more yield when intercropped with tomato as
compared to mono cropped bush bean.
When legumes grow as mono-crop or inter-crop with another legume did not significantly
increase the yield. Intercropping legumes (bean or cowpea) with tomato is more
beneficial for legume as well as tomato. Significantly higher microbial activity (840 CO2
mg/kg of soil) was observed in tomato grown as mono-crop however the highest microbial
activity does not mean the highest yield.