K. Michels et al., WIND EROSION IN THE SOUTHERN SAHELIAN ZONE AND INDUCED CONSTRAINTS TOPEARL-MILLET PRODUCTION, Agricultural and forest meteorology, 67(1-2), 1993, pp. 65-77
On the sandy soils in the Southern Sahelian Zone, wind erosion owing t
o frequent short sand storms, especially at the beginning of the rainy
season, is one of the constraints to crop growth. Sand storms and the
ir effects on millet burial and growth were monitored during the 1990
growing season at the International Crops Research Institute for the S
emi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) Sahelian Center, Niamey, Niger. During the
growing season, the accumulated sand captured at 0.1 m above the soil
surface attained 1262 kg m(-2) vertical sampler opening. Ninety per ce
nt of the millet pockets sown with the first rains were covered at 22
days after emergence and the crop was resown. During one single wind e
rosion event, 384 kg m(-2) of sand was trapped and 40% of all millet p
ockets were totally covered. Surviving plants from the partially cover
ed pockets showed delays in growth and development. The maximum plant
height and leaf number were lower with a significant reduction in the
leaf area index. Grain yield from unaffected pockets was nearly twice
that of the pockets which were partially covered. Protection measures
against wind erosion may have a potential to stabilize millet producti
on in the Southern Sahelian Zone.