Litter and biomass production from planted and natural fallows on a degraded soil in southwestern Nigeria

To rehabilitate a degraded Alfisol at Ibadan, southwestern Nigeria, Senna siamea (non-N-fixing legume tree), Leucaena leucocephala, and Acacia leptocarpa (N-fixing legume trees) were planted in 1989, and Acacia auriculiformis (N-fixing legume tree) in 1990. Pueraria phaseoloides (a cover crop) and n...

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Autores principales: Salako, F.K., Tian, G.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96608
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author Salako, F.K.
Tian, G.
author_browse Salako, F.K.
Tian, G.
author_facet Salako, F.K.
Tian, G.
author_sort Salako, F.K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description To rehabilitate a degraded Alfisol at Ibadan, southwestern Nigeria, Senna siamea (non-N-fixing legume tree), Leucaena leucocephala, and Acacia leptocarpa (N-fixing legume trees) were planted in 1989, and Acacia auriculiformis (N-fixing legume tree) in 1990. Pueraria phaseoloides (a cover crop) and natural fallow were included as treatments. Litterfall and climatic variables were measured in 1992/1993 and 1996/1997 while biomass production and nutrient concentrations were measured in 1993 and 1995. Total litter production from the natural and planted fallows was similar, with means ranging from 10.0 (L. leucocephala) to 13.6 t ha−1 y−1 (natural fallow) during the 1996/1997 collection. Leaves constituted 73% (L. leucocephala) to 96% (A. auriculiformis) of total litterfall. Acacia auriculiformis grew most quickly but S. siamea produced the highest aboveground biomass which was 127 t ha−1 accumulated over four years, and 156 t ha−1 accumulated over six years of establishment. The aboveground biomass of P. phaseoloides and natural fallow was only 6 to 9 t ha−1 at six years after planting. Nitrogen concentration in the leaves/twigs of was 2.5% for L. leucocephala, and 2% for other planted species and natural fallow. Pueraria phaseoloides had concentrations of P, K, Ca and Mg comparable to levels in the leaves/twigs of the tree species. Through PATH analysis, it was found that maximum temperature and minimum relative humidity had pronounced direct and indirect effects on litterfall. The effects of these climatic variables in triggering litterfall were enhanced by other variables, such as evaporation, wind, radiation, and minimum temperature. Improvement in chemical properties by fallows was observed in the degraded soil.
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spelling CGSpace966082024-08-29T11:41:34Z Litter and biomass production from planted and natural fallows on a degraded soil in southwestern Nigeria Salako, F.K. Tian, G. biomass fallow soil cover crops soil fertility To rehabilitate a degraded Alfisol at Ibadan, southwestern Nigeria, Senna siamea (non-N-fixing legume tree), Leucaena leucocephala, and Acacia leptocarpa (N-fixing legume trees) were planted in 1989, and Acacia auriculiformis (N-fixing legume tree) in 1990. Pueraria phaseoloides (a cover crop) and natural fallow were included as treatments. Litterfall and climatic variables were measured in 1992/1993 and 1996/1997 while biomass production and nutrient concentrations were measured in 1993 and 1995. Total litter production from the natural and planted fallows was similar, with means ranging from 10.0 (L. leucocephala) to 13.6 t ha−1 y−1 (natural fallow) during the 1996/1997 collection. Leaves constituted 73% (L. leucocephala) to 96% (A. auriculiformis) of total litterfall. Acacia auriculiformis grew most quickly but S. siamea produced the highest aboveground biomass which was 127 t ha−1 accumulated over four years, and 156 t ha−1 accumulated over six years of establishment. The aboveground biomass of P. phaseoloides and natural fallow was only 6 to 9 t ha−1 at six years after planting. Nitrogen concentration in the leaves/twigs of was 2.5% for L. leucocephala, and 2% for other planted species and natural fallow. Pueraria phaseoloides had concentrations of P, K, Ca and Mg comparable to levels in the leaves/twigs of the tree species. Through PATH analysis, it was found that maximum temperature and minimum relative humidity had pronounced direct and indirect effects on litterfall. The effects of these climatic variables in triggering litterfall were enhanced by other variables, such as evaporation, wind, radiation, and minimum temperature. Improvement in chemical properties by fallows was observed in the degraded soil. 2001 2018-08-20T13:35:49Z 2018-08-20T13:35:49Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96608 en Limited Access Springer Salako, F.K. & Tian, G. (2001). Litter and biomass production from planted and natural fallows on a degraded soil in southwestern Nigeria. Agroforestry Systems, 51(3), 239-251.
spellingShingle biomass
fallow
soil
cover crops
soil fertility
Salako, F.K.
Tian, G.
Litter and biomass production from planted and natural fallows on a degraded soil in southwestern Nigeria
title Litter and biomass production from planted and natural fallows on a degraded soil in southwestern Nigeria
title_full Litter and biomass production from planted and natural fallows on a degraded soil in southwestern Nigeria
title_fullStr Litter and biomass production from planted and natural fallows on a degraded soil in southwestern Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Litter and biomass production from planted and natural fallows on a degraded soil in southwestern Nigeria
title_short Litter and biomass production from planted and natural fallows on a degraded soil in southwestern Nigeria
title_sort litter and biomass production from planted and natural fallows on a degraded soil in southwestern nigeria
topic biomass
fallow
soil
cover crops
soil fertility
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96608
work_keys_str_mv AT salakofk litterandbiomassproductionfromplantedandnaturalfallowsonadegradedsoilinsouthwesternnigeria
AT tiang litterandbiomassproductionfromplantedandnaturalfallowsonadegradedsoilinsouthwesternnigeria