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Abundance and diversity of earthworms following six years of tillage, fertilizer and weeding regimes in a maize field in northern Zimbabwe
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  • NILTON MASHAVAKURE,
  • Bliss Gutukunhuwa,
  • Arnold Mashingaidze,
  • Edson Gandiwa
NILTON MASHAVAKURE
Chinhoyi University of Technology

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Bliss Gutukunhuwa
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Arnold Mashingaidze
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Edson Gandiwa
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Abstract

Earthworms are a major component of soil fauna communities with positive effects on soil chemical, biological and physical processes. A study was carried out at Chinhoyi University of Technology experimental farm, Zimbabwe, to investigate the medium-term effects of cultural practices on earthworm communities in a maize-based cropping system. Data were collected in the 2018/2019 cropping season from a six-year old experiment with tillage system (conventional, rip line seeding and basin planting), fertiliser application rate (zero, low: 35.2 kg ha−1 N + 12.2 kg ha−1 P2O5 + 6.6 kg ha−1K2O, medium: 41.5 kg ha−1 N + 14 kg ha−1 P2O5 + 7 kg ha−1 K2O, and high: 83 kg ha−1 N + 28 kg ha−1 P2O5: 14 kg ha−1 K2O.) and weeding intensity (twice, four times and clean weeding) as the main, sub- and sub-subplots, respectively. Lumbricus (34.4%) and Diplocardia (38.3%) were the dominant genera while endogeic earthworms (48.4%) dominated the community structure among other earthworm functional groups. Lumbricus abundance, total earthworm abundance, genus richness and Shannon diversity index were higher in clean weeded plots under the basin planting system relative to other treatments. Inorganic fertiliser application in the conventional tillage (CT) system reduced Eisenia abundance and genus richness. There was a positive correlation between total earthworm abundance (r = 0.34, P < 0.001) and negative correlation of Diplocardia abundance (r = -21, P < 0.05) with maize grain yield. These results suggest that in minimum tillage systems clean weeding has positive effects on earthworms while in CT, application of high doses of inorganic fertiliser is detrimental to earthworm communities.