Pedosphere 15(1): 46--51, 2005
ISSN 1002-0160/CN 32-1315/P
©2005 Soil Science Society of China
Published by Elsevier B.V. and Science Press
Effect of organic manure and chemical amendments on soil properties and crop yield on a salt affected entisol
A. U. BHATTI1, Q. KHAN1, A. H. GURMANI2 and M. J. KHAN1
1 Department of Soil and Environmental Sciences, NWFP Agricultural University, Peshawar (Pakistan). E-mail: drbhatti@brain.net.pk
2 Arid Zone Research Institute, Dera Ismail Khan, NWFP (Pakistan)
ABSTRACT
      A field experiment was conducted for two consecutive years in a farmer's field at Haji Mora Village, Dera Ismail Khan (D. I. Khan) in the Northwest Frontier Province (NWPP) of Pakistan to compare various management practices, such as the effect of various organic manures and gypsum in a rice-wheat cropping system on a saline-sodic Entisol (Zindani soil series). The treatments consisted of 1) a control (rice-wheat), 2) gypsum, 3) farmyard manure (FYM), 4) berseem (Trifolium alexzndrinum L.) as green manure (GM), and 5) dhancha (Sesbania sp.) as GM. All treatments increased yields of both rice and wheat significantly (P < 0.01) over the control, with the green manure treatments proving more economical than the others; while they decreased pH, electrical conductivity (EC), and sodium adsorption ratio (SAR) of the soil. Saturation percentage and available water of the soil were raised for all treatments due to an increase in organic matter content of the soil.
Key Words:  berseem, dhancha, farm yard manure, gypsum, saline-sodic Entisol
Citation: Bhatti, A. U., Khan, Q., Gurmani, A. H. and Khan, M. J. 2005. Effect of organic manure and chemical amendments on soil properties and crop yield on a salt affected entisol. Pedosphere. 15(1): 46-51.
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