Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10295296 | Soil and Tillage Research | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Particulate organic matter (POM) with long-term (8.2 g kgâ1) and short-term cultivation (6.6 g kgâ1) were significantly (P â¤Â 0.007) higher than for native vegetation (2.1 g kgâ1). In the 0-10 cm soil depth, cultivation had no effect on total nitrogen (TN), organic carbon (OC) and bulk density (Bd). However, in the 10-20 cm soil depth, significantly (P â¤Â 0.03) greater N was present under the long-term cultivation (0.46 g kgâ1) than under native vegetation and short-term cultivation (0.26-0.33 g kgâ1). At 10-20 cm, soil bulk density under long-term cultivation (1.5 mg mâ3) was lower (P â¤Â 0.01) than under short-term cultivation (1.8 mg mâ3) and native vegetation (1.7 mg mâ3). At 20-30 cm, TN and bulk density were not affected, but OC was significantly (P â¤Â 0.009) higher under native vegetation (4.9 g kgâ1) than under short-term cultivation (1.7 g kgâ1). It could be concluded that, long-term production of sugarcane in fine textured soils (>52% clay) improved soil properties relative to native vegetation in the semi-arid tropics.
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Authors
A.R. Mubarak, O.M.E. Elshami, A.A. Azhari,