Plant nutrient uptake by the maize crop under different erosion levels and granitic sandy soils of Zimbabwe

Sheet erosion selectively removes fine soil particles like organic matter and clay, which are critical in soil productivity as they determine the nutrient-supplying capacity as well as the water-holding capacity of the soils. The process is often insidious and may go unnoticed until yields decline d...

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Main Author: Munodawafa, Adelaide
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Midlands State University 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/475
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author Munodawafa, Adelaide
author_facet Munodawafa, Adelaide
author_sort Munodawafa, Adelaide
collection DSpace
description Sheet erosion selectively removes fine soil particles like organic matter and clay, which are critical in soil productivity as they determine the nutrient-supplying capacity as well as the water-holding capacity of the soils. The process is often insidious and may go unnoticed until yields decline drastically. The use of hybrid seed and fertilizers often masks the seriousness of the problem, but it is not known to what extent. This study, therefore sought to assess the uptake of plant nutrients (N, P, K) under five different erosion levels and two fertilizer levels (normal and double). Different erosion levels were achieved by removing different depths of topsoil (scalping). The results showed that nutrient uptake decreased significantly with increase in erosion (N and P at P<0.001; K at P<0.002). The fertilizer use efficiency decreased drastically from uneroded to severely eroded plots. Doubling the fertilizer amount only increased uptake slightly but fertilizer use efficiency remained overall lower than under normal fertilized plots. Soil conservation is the key to sustained soil productivity through maintenance of soil structure and optimal uptake of water and plant nutrients.
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spelling ir-11408-4752022-06-27T13:49:06Z Plant nutrient uptake by the maize crop under different erosion levels and granitic sandy soils of Zimbabwe Munodawafa, Adelaide Soil productivity Sheet erosion selectively removes fine soil particles like organic matter and clay, which are critical in soil productivity as they determine the nutrient-supplying capacity as well as the water-holding capacity of the soils. The process is often insidious and may go unnoticed until yields decline drastically. The use of hybrid seed and fertilizers often masks the seriousness of the problem, but it is not known to what extent. This study, therefore sought to assess the uptake of plant nutrients (N, P, K) under five different erosion levels and two fertilizer levels (normal and double). Different erosion levels were achieved by removing different depths of topsoil (scalping). The results showed that nutrient uptake decreased significantly with increase in erosion (N and P at P<0.001; K at P<0.002). The fertilizer use efficiency decreased drastically from uneroded to severely eroded plots. Doubling the fertilizer amount only increased uptake slightly but fertilizer use efficiency remained overall lower than under normal fertilized plots. Soil conservation is the key to sustained soil productivity through maintenance of soil structure and optimal uptake of water and plant nutrients. 2014-10-15T13:53:50Z 2014-10-15T13:53:50Z 2012 Article 1992-0903 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/475 en Midlands State University Journal of Science Agriculture and Technology;Vol. 3(1) open Midlands State University
spellingShingle Soil productivity
Munodawafa, Adelaide
Plant nutrient uptake by the maize crop under different erosion levels and granitic sandy soils of Zimbabwe
title Plant nutrient uptake by the maize crop under different erosion levels and granitic sandy soils of Zimbabwe
title_full Plant nutrient uptake by the maize crop under different erosion levels and granitic sandy soils of Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Plant nutrient uptake by the maize crop under different erosion levels and granitic sandy soils of Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Plant nutrient uptake by the maize crop under different erosion levels and granitic sandy soils of Zimbabwe
title_short Plant nutrient uptake by the maize crop under different erosion levels and granitic sandy soils of Zimbabwe
title_sort plant nutrient uptake by the maize crop under different erosion levels and granitic sandy soils of zimbabwe
topic Soil productivity
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/475
work_keys_str_mv AT munodawafaadelaide plantnutrientuptakebythemaizecropunderdifferenterosionlevelsandgraniticsandysoilsofzimbabwe