TITLE:
Agronomic and Phytosanitary Determinants of Cotton Yield in Côte d’Ivoire: A Five-Year Multi-Site Analysis (2021-2025)
AUTHORS:
Kouakou Malanno, N’Goran Kouadio Emmanuel, Kouakou Brou Julien, Amangoua Nogbou Ferdinand, Bini Kouadio Kra Norbert, Kobenan Koffi Christophe, Gnapi Diane Estelle
KEYWORDS:
Cotton Yield, Côte d’Ivoire, Jassids, Amrasca biguttula, Sowing Date, Cultivation Practices
JOURNAL NAME:
Agricultural Sciences,
Vol.17 No.6,
June
30,
2026
ABSTRACT: Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) is a strategic cash crop in Côte d’Ivoire, yet substantial yield variability continues to constrain productivity under smallholder farming conditions. This study aimed to identify and quantify the principal agronomic and phytosanitary factors associated with cotton yield variation across the Ivorian cotton belt. We monitored 2693 farmer-managed cotton plots over five consecutive cropping seasons (2021-2025) in 59 localities distributed along a latitudinal gradient from 7.02˚N to 10.49˚N. Recorded variables included sowing date, variety, cultivation type, previous crop, and pest infestation levels. Descriptive summaries were established for the full monitored dataset, whereas non-parametric analyses (Kruskal-Wallis tests, Dunn’s post-hoc comparisons, and Spearman correlations), Principal Component Analysis, and multiple regression were applied to an analytical subset of 1514 plots with non-zero yield and complete information for the variables analyzed. Within the monitored dataset, mean seed cotton yield was 1146.25 ± 314.18 kg/ha, with a median of 1115.00 kg/ha. Year was the strongest determinant of yield (η2 = 0.23), followed by cultivation type (η2 = 0.13). Animal traction was associated with substantially higher yields than manual cultivation (1167 vs. 899 kg/ha; p ρ = −0.28; p