EFFECT OF COMPOST DOSES ON SOIL RESILIENCE IN PALU VALLEY
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22487/agroland.v7i2.623Kata Kunci:
Compost, Soil resilience, Soil structureAbstrak
Applying organic matter to the soil surface is an effective effort to increase soil resilience in the Palu valley, which is classified as low. This study aimed to determine: 1) the effect of several doses of compost on the physico-chemical properties of the soil, 2) the correlation between the percentage of organic carbon and total nitrogen in the soil to several physico-chemical properties of the soil. The research was based on a randomized block design in a greenhouse of the Faculty of Agriculture, Tadulako University, Palu. Compost uses raw materials for plantain stems (Musa textilia) and leaves of Gamal (Gliricidia sepium). The compost doses used in the experiment consisted of 0%, 1%, 2%, 3%, 4%, and 5% of the weight of air-dry soil, respectively. The treatment was repeated three times. The results showed that compost application significantly affected soil content weight, total porosity, saturated hydraulic conductivity, field capacity moisture content, percentage of organic carbon, total nitrogen, and cation exchange capacity. The correlation test results showed a powerful relationship between the percentage of organic carbon or total soil nitrogen to other soil physico-chemical properties observed in the experiment.
Unduhan
Referensi
Unduhan
Diterbitkan
Terbitan
Bagian
Lisensi
AGROLAND The Agricultural Sciences Journal (e-Journal) is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International License
All articles published Open Access are free for everyone to read and download. Under the CC-BY-SA license, authors retain ownership of the copyright for their article, but authors grant others permission to use the content of publications in AGROLAND The Agricultural Sciences Journal (e-Journal) in whole or in part provided that the original work is properly cited.
Users (redistributors) of AGROLAND The Agricultural Sciences Journal (e-Journal) are required to cite the original source, including the author's names, AGROLAND The Agricultural Sciences Journal (e-Journal) as the initial source of publication, year of publication, and volume number.

