Effect of agroforestry woody species on earthwarm activities and physicochemical properties of warm casts

The effects of five agroforestry woody species (Dactyladenia barteri, Gliricidia sepium, Leucaena leucocephala, Senna siamea andTreculia africana) on the surface aasting activity ofHyperiodrilus africanus were studied in an Alfisol (Oxic Paleustalf) in southwestern Nigeria. Casting activity under th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kang, B., Akinnifesi, F.K., Pleysier, J.L.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100903
_version_ 1855534367337611264
author Kang, B.
Akinnifesi, F.K.
Pleysier, J.L.
author_browse Akinnifesi, F.K.
Kang, B.
Pleysier, J.L.
author_facet Kang, B.
Akinnifesi, F.K.
Pleysier, J.L.
author_sort Kang, B.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The effects of five agroforestry woody species (Dactyladenia barteri, Gliricidia sepium, Leucaena leucocephala, Senna siamea andTreculia africana) on the surface aasting activity ofHyperiodrilus africanus were studied in an Alfisol (Oxic Paleustalf) in southwestern Nigeria. Casting activity under the woody species decreased in the following order:Dactyladenia sp. (26.4 Mg ha-1 year-1)>Gliricidia sp. (24.4 Mg ha-1 year-1)>Treculia sp. (22.9 Mg ha-1 year-1)>Leucaena sp. (18.6 Mg ha-1 year-1)>Senna sp. (18.3 Mg ha-1 year-1). These differences in casting activity were partly explained by microclimatic effects. Irrespective of the woody species, the worm casts were higher in clay and silt contents, bulk density, water-stable aggregates, pH, organic C, exchangeable cations, effective cation exchange capacity, and extractable P levels than the corresponding surface soils. The woody species did affect the physicochemical properties and P sorption of the worm casts. The content of water-stable aggregates of worm casts decreased in the following order:Dactyladenia sp.>Treculia sp.>Senna sp.>Leucaena sp.>Gliricidia sp. Large differences in extractable P levels were observed.Senna sp. was associated with the highest extractable P level (11.5 mg kg-1) andTreculia sp. the lowest (4.9 mg kg-1). P sorption was highest on worm casts underDactyladenia sp. and lowest on those underTreculia sp. Without fertilizer application, there were no significant differences in the dry weight of maize grown in the different worm casts. With NPK applications, the dry weight of maize grown in worm casts associated withTreculia sp. was significantly lower than that of maize grown in the other worm casts, mainly due to the low extractable P level. Despite a high organic C and exchangeable K status, maize grown in the worm casts still responded significantly to N and K applications. The N uptake by maize grown in worm casts associated withTreculia sp. was lower than that in the other treatments.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace100903
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1994
publishDateRange 1994
publishDateSort 1994
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1009032023-06-12T19:44:19Z Effect of agroforestry woody species on earthwarm activities and physicochemical properties of warm casts Kang, B. Akinnifesi, F.K. Pleysier, J.L. fertilizers maize soil The effects of five agroforestry woody species (Dactyladenia barteri, Gliricidia sepium, Leucaena leucocephala, Senna siamea andTreculia africana) on the surface aasting activity ofHyperiodrilus africanus were studied in an Alfisol (Oxic Paleustalf) in southwestern Nigeria. Casting activity under the woody species decreased in the following order:Dactyladenia sp. (26.4 Mg ha-1 year-1)>Gliricidia sp. (24.4 Mg ha-1 year-1)>Treculia sp. (22.9 Mg ha-1 year-1)>Leucaena sp. (18.6 Mg ha-1 year-1)>Senna sp. (18.3 Mg ha-1 year-1). These differences in casting activity were partly explained by microclimatic effects. Irrespective of the woody species, the worm casts were higher in clay and silt contents, bulk density, water-stable aggregates, pH, organic C, exchangeable cations, effective cation exchange capacity, and extractable P levels than the corresponding surface soils. The woody species did affect the physicochemical properties and P sorption of the worm casts. The content of water-stable aggregates of worm casts decreased in the following order:Dactyladenia sp.>Treculia sp.>Senna sp.>Leucaena sp.>Gliricidia sp. Large differences in extractable P levels were observed.Senna sp. was associated with the highest extractable P level (11.5 mg kg-1) andTreculia sp. the lowest (4.9 mg kg-1). P sorption was highest on worm casts underDactyladenia sp. and lowest on those underTreculia sp. Without fertilizer application, there were no significant differences in the dry weight of maize grown in the different worm casts. With NPK applications, the dry weight of maize grown in worm casts associated withTreculia sp. was significantly lower than that of maize grown in the other worm casts, mainly due to the low extractable P level. Despite a high organic C and exchangeable K status, maize grown in the worm casts still responded significantly to N and K applications. The N uptake by maize grown in worm casts associated withTreculia sp. was lower than that in the other treatments. 1994 2019-04-24T12:29:33Z 2019-04-24T12:29:33Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100903 en Limited Access Kang, B., Akinnifesi, F.K. & Pleysier, J.L. (1994). Effect of agroforestry woody species on earthwarm activities and physicochemical properties of warm casts. Biology and Fertility of Soils, 18(3), 193-199.
spellingShingle fertilizers
maize
soil
Kang, B.
Akinnifesi, F.K.
Pleysier, J.L.
Effect of agroforestry woody species on earthwarm activities and physicochemical properties of warm casts
title Effect of agroforestry woody species on earthwarm activities and physicochemical properties of warm casts
title_full Effect of agroforestry woody species on earthwarm activities and physicochemical properties of warm casts
title_fullStr Effect of agroforestry woody species on earthwarm activities and physicochemical properties of warm casts
title_full_unstemmed Effect of agroforestry woody species on earthwarm activities and physicochemical properties of warm casts
title_short Effect of agroforestry woody species on earthwarm activities and physicochemical properties of warm casts
title_sort effect of agroforestry woody species on earthwarm activities and physicochemical properties of warm casts
topic fertilizers
maize
soil
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100903
work_keys_str_mv AT kangb effectofagroforestrywoodyspeciesonearthwarmactivitiesandphysicochemicalpropertiesofwarmcasts
AT akinnifesifk effectofagroforestrywoodyspeciesonearthwarmactivitiesandphysicochemicalpropertiesofwarmcasts
AT pleysierjl effectofagroforestrywoodyspeciesonearthwarmactivitiesandphysicochemicalpropertiesofwarmcasts