Storage of nutriments in black anthropogenic soils from the East-African Great Lakes Region

In the East-African Great Lakes Region, low crop yields due to widespread soil infertility involve difficulties to cope with demographic pressure. Banana cropping systems are widespread and crucial for people livelihood. Improving their sustainability requires a better understanding of nutrient dyna...

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Autores principales: Delstanche, S., Asten, Piet J.A. van, Gaidashova, S.V., Delvaux, B.
Formato: Manuscript-unpublished
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92225
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author Delstanche, S.
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Gaidashova, S.V.
Delvaux, B.
author_browse Asten, Piet J.A. van
Delstanche, S.
Delvaux, B.
Gaidashova, S.V.
author_facet Delstanche, S.
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Gaidashova, S.V.
Delvaux, B.
author_sort Delstanche, S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In the East-African Great Lakes Region, low crop yields due to widespread soil infertility involve difficulties to cope with demographic pressure. Banana cropping systems are widespread and crucial for people livelihood. Improving their sustainability requires a better understanding of nutrient dynamics and soil fertility. We studied highly weathered soils in four sites from Rwanda and Burundi. The soils differed in parent rock: granite, shale, and other pelitic rocks. In four homesteads at each site, soils were sampled as a function of depth and distance to farmer’s house. We determined soil physico-chemical properties and total elemental contents, as well as soil mineralogical constitution.Typical black anthropogenic soils similar to the Amazonian Dark Earths (Terra Preta) occurred where banana cropping was ancient and soils benefited from frequent supply of organic manure and ash cooking residues. Close to home buildings, the thickness of dark Ah horizons could be above 160 cm. Soil management practices and accumulation of organic matter significantly increased soil porosity and root exploration allowing enhanced uptake of water and nutrients, thereby increasing biomass of banana plants. PCA-analysis (Matlab Student Version R2007a)involving eight soil properties yielded to 78% of total variance born by the two first principal components (PC). PC1 (53%) was positively correlated to CEC and total contents of C, Ca, P, and Mg. PC2 (25%) was defined by a strong negative correlation between total Fe content and total contents of Si and K. Our data thus show that two major types of soil properties discriminated the soil samples: (1) organic matter content and major plant nutrients (Ca, Mg, P), both linked to past and current soil management practices, (2) nature of parent rock, linked to the abundance of iron and the occurrence of muscovite as residual mineral.
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spelling CGSpace922252025-12-08T09:54:28Z Storage of nutriments in black anthropogenic soils from the East-African Great Lakes Region Delstanche, S. Asten, Piet J.A. van Gaidashova, S.V. Delvaux, B. soil banana cropping soil management practices organic matter soil fertility In the East-African Great Lakes Region, low crop yields due to widespread soil infertility involve difficulties to cope with demographic pressure. Banana cropping systems are widespread and crucial for people livelihood. Improving their sustainability requires a better understanding of nutrient dynamics and soil fertility. We studied highly weathered soils in four sites from Rwanda and Burundi. The soils differed in parent rock: granite, shale, and other pelitic rocks. In four homesteads at each site, soils were sampled as a function of depth and distance to farmer’s house. We determined soil physico-chemical properties and total elemental contents, as well as soil mineralogical constitution.Typical black anthropogenic soils similar to the Amazonian Dark Earths (Terra Preta) occurred where banana cropping was ancient and soils benefited from frequent supply of organic manure and ash cooking residues. Close to home buildings, the thickness of dark Ah horizons could be above 160 cm. Soil management practices and accumulation of organic matter significantly increased soil porosity and root exploration allowing enhanced uptake of water and nutrients, thereby increasing biomass of banana plants. PCA-analysis (Matlab Student Version R2007a)involving eight soil properties yielded to 78% of total variance born by the two first principal components (PC). PC1 (53%) was positively correlated to CEC and total contents of C, Ca, P, and Mg. PC2 (25%) was defined by a strong negative correlation between total Fe content and total contents of Si and K. Our data thus show that two major types of soil properties discriminated the soil samples: (1) organic matter content and major plant nutrients (Ca, Mg, P), both linked to past and current soil management practices, (2) nature of parent rock, linked to the abundance of iron and the occurrence of muscovite as residual mineral. 2008 2018-04-24T08:40:17Z 2018-04-24T08:40:17Z Manuscript-unpublished https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92225 en Limited Access Delstanche, S., Van Asten, P., Gaidashova, S. & Delvaux, B. (2008). Storage of nutriments in black anthropogenic soils from the East-African Great Lakes Region. Eurosoil Conference, Vienna, 25-29 August, 2008. P.1
spellingShingle soil
banana cropping
soil management practices
organic matter
soil fertility
Delstanche, S.
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Gaidashova, S.V.
Delvaux, B.
Storage of nutriments in black anthropogenic soils from the East-African Great Lakes Region
title Storage of nutriments in black anthropogenic soils from the East-African Great Lakes Region
title_full Storage of nutriments in black anthropogenic soils from the East-African Great Lakes Region
title_fullStr Storage of nutriments in black anthropogenic soils from the East-African Great Lakes Region
title_full_unstemmed Storage of nutriments in black anthropogenic soils from the East-African Great Lakes Region
title_short Storage of nutriments in black anthropogenic soils from the East-African Great Lakes Region
title_sort storage of nutriments in black anthropogenic soils from the east african great lakes region
topic soil
banana cropping
soil management practices
organic matter
soil fertility
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92225
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