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Aggregate-associated soil organic carbon and total nitrogen following amendment of puddled and<i>sawah</i>-managed rice soils in southeastern Nigeria
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Citations
25
References
2012
Year
Total NitrogenBiogeochemistryOrganic CarbonEngineeringEnvironmental EngineeringSoil ScienceSoil Organic MatterSoil StructureAgricultural EconomicsEnvironmental RemediationSoutheastern NigeriaSoil ManagementSoil FunctionRice SoilsSoil FertilityFine AggregatesSoil EnvironmentSoil Biochemistry
Puddling during sawah rice cultivation destabilizes the soil structure. The re-formation of soil water-stable aggregates (WSA) following puddling and amendments, and their associated organic carbon (SOC) and total N were studied at Akaeze and Ikwo in south-eastern Nigeria. The amendments, which were randomized in triplicate, include control, NPK fertilizer, poultry dropping, rice husk powder and rice husk ashes (RHA). Soil samples from 0 to 15 cm depth were taken from the field after 2 years of cultivation. Most of the SOC were found in the very fine aggregates. There was no consistent trend in the treatment effects. However, the NPK-amended soils showed the lowest values of WSA > 2 mm in both locations, whereas the poultry dropping-amended soils showed the least and the highest mean-weight diameter (MWD) values at Akaeze and Ikwo, respectively. The SOC of the whole soil in Akaeze correlated positively with MWD (r = 0.92*). Irrespective of location, SOC in soils and WSA > 2.00 mm correlated positively with MWD (r = 0.56*; 0.65*, respectively) while SOC in WSA 0.50–0.25 mm accounted for low MWD values. More carbon was sequestered at Akaeze than at Ikwo, with the RHA-amended soils being the highest at both locations.
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