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Productivity and Profitability of Moringa-Brinjal-Based Agroforestry Farming System

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dc.contributor.author Roy, Manoshi
dc.contributor.author Helal, Murtoza
dc.contributor.author Helal, Golam Jilani
dc.contributor.author Kausar, Hossain
dc.contributor.author Jahan, Mohammad Shah
dc.date.accessioned 2025-11-23T05:33:42Z
dc.date.available 2025-11-23T05:33:42Z
dc.date.issued 2024-08
dc.identifier.citation Roy, M. ., Helal, M., Helal, G. J., & Kausar, H. (2024). Productivity and Profitability of Moringa-Brinjal-Based Agroforestry Farming System. Journal of Science and Technology Research , 5(1), 9–20. https://doi.org/10.3329/jscitr.v5i1.74000 en_US
dc.identifier.issn issn
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/10.3329/jscitr.v5i1.74000
dc.description.abstract An investigation was carried out to assess the productivity and profitability of brinjal during the initial phase of Moringa establishment. Experimental design employed a Randomized Complete Block Design with four distinct treatments: (i) T1 (30 cm distance from the tree base), (ii) T2 (40 cm distance from the tree base), (iii) T3 (50 cm distance from the tree base), and (iv) T4 (open field, control), each treatment being replicated four times. Data were systematically collected from randomly selected plants within each plot and subjected to statistical analysis. The findings indicated that the T4 (control) treatment exhibited superior performance for various parameters, namely plant height, leaf number, branch number, fruit number, fruit weight, and yield. Treatment T4 produced the highest values for fruit weight per plant (1.9 kg), single fruit weight (72.6 g), and fruit yield (34.2 t/ha). Following closely, T3 ranked second with values of 1.6 kg, 67.4 g, and 28.3 t for fruit weight per plant, single fruit weight, and fruit yield per hectare, respectively. In contrast, T1 yielded the lowest results in fruit weight per plant (0.76 kg), single fruit weight (59.6 g), and fruit yield (13.4 t/ha). The analysis of the land equivalent ratio revealed that treatment T3 achieved the highest ratio at 1.81, indicating a positive correlation between a greater distance from the Moringa tree base and an increased brinjal yield. The study concludes that cultivating brinjal in association with one-year-old Moringa trees, while maintaining a 50 cm distance from the tree base, results in optimal yield. J. of Sci. and Tech. Res. 5(1): 09-20, 2023 en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Journal of Science and Technology Research en_US
dc.subject Drumstick en_US
dc.subject Brinjal en_US
dc.subject Growth Parameter en_US
dc.subject Yield en_US
dc.subject Agroforestry en_US
dc.title Productivity and Profitability of Moringa-Brinjal-Based Agroforestry Farming System en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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