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Nutrient Balances as Indicators of Sustainability in acacia senegal Land use Systems in the Semi-arid Zone of North Kordofan, Sudan

El Tahir, Bashir Awad ; Daldoum, M.A. and Ardö, Jonas LU orcid (2013) In Standard Scientific Research and Essays 1(5). p.93-112
Abstract
The objectives of this study were: (1) to assess nutrient flows and balances at land management

systems and cropping seasons levels, and (2) to determine rate of nutrient depletion. The study

was conducted in dry lands of Northern Kordofan, Sudan, at El Demokeya Forest Reserve (lat.13°

16′ ′′ ′N; long. 30° 29′ ′′ ′E, and alt. 560 m), over three cropping seasons (2002, 2003 and 2004). Flows

and balances of organic carbon (OC), nitrogen (N), phosphorous (P) and potassium (K) in pure

and intercropped sorghum, roselle and grasses with Acacia senegal at low- and high-tree density

(LD 266 and HD 433 trees ha

-1

, respectively) were investigated. Sources of nutrient... (More)
The objectives of this study were: (1) to assess nutrient flows and balances at land management

systems and cropping seasons levels, and (2) to determine rate of nutrient depletion. The study

was conducted in dry lands of Northern Kordofan, Sudan, at El Demokeya Forest Reserve (lat.13°

16′ ′′ ′N; long. 30° 29′ ′′ ′E, and alt. 560 m), over three cropping seasons (2002, 2003 and 2004). Flows

and balances of organic carbon (OC), nitrogen (N), phosphorous (P) and potassium (K) in pure

and intercropped sorghum, roselle and grasses with Acacia senegal at low- and high-tree density

(LD 266 and HD 433 trees ha

-1

, respectively) were investigated. Sources of nutrient inflows were

organic matter (OM) from trees, gum Arabic, crop roots, atmospheric deposition, and N2fixation.

Outflows were harvested products, crop residues, leaching, gaseous losses and wind erosion.

Nutrient balances were positive in grass systems, but negative in pure sorghum and roselle.

Large variations exist between inter cropped sorghum and roselle systems. Nutrient balances

were positive during the poor cropping season (2002), while negative during the good season

(2003). Nutrient depletion was severe for all studied nutrients in pure sorghum and roselle, but P

depletion was remarkably more severe in roselle systems. For all systems, P availability is the

major determinant of sustainability. The study demonstrated that OM was essential for positive

nutrient balances. Hence, intercropping is considered as an appropriate option to enhance soil

fertility. Ways for adjusting the negative balancesin the context of sustainability were suggested. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Organic carbon, Nutrient depletion, Sustainability, cropping seasons, Gum Arabic
in
Standard Scientific Research and Essays
volume
1
issue
5
pages
93 - 112
publisher
STANDARD RESEARCH JOURNALS
ISSN
2310-7502
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
e924e53b-f939-49d4-baf9-f9646aa62c1b (old id 4222495)
alternative location
http://standresjournals.org/journals/SSRE/Pdf/2013/june/El%20Tahir%20et%20al.pdf
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 13:59:17
date last changed
2020-09-22 02:22:15
@article{e924e53b-f939-49d4-baf9-f9646aa62c1b,
  abstract     = {{The objectives of this study were: (1) to assess nutrient flows and balances at land management <br/><br>
systems and cropping seasons levels, and (2) to determine rate of nutrient depletion. The study <br/><br>
was conducted in dry lands of Northern Kordofan, Sudan, at El Demokeya Forest Reserve (lat.13° <br/><br>
16′ ′′ ′N; long. 30° 29′ ′′ ′E, and alt. 560 m), over three cropping seasons (2002, 2003 and 2004). Flows <br/><br>
and balances of organic carbon (OC), nitrogen (N), phosphorous (P) and potassium (K) in pure <br/><br>
and intercropped sorghum, roselle and grasses with Acacia senegal at low- and high-tree density <br/><br>
(LD 266 and HD 433 trees ha<br/><br>
-1<br/><br>
, respectively) were investigated. Sources of nutrient inflows were <br/><br>
organic matter (OM) from trees, gum Arabic, crop roots, atmospheric deposition, and N2fixation. <br/><br>
Outflows were harvested products, crop residues, leaching, gaseous losses and wind erosion. <br/><br>
Nutrient balances were positive in grass systems, but negative in pure sorghum and roselle. <br/><br>
Large variations exist between inter cropped sorghum and roselle systems. Nutrient balances <br/><br>
were positive during the poor cropping season (2002), while negative during the good season <br/><br>
(2003). Nutrient depletion was severe for all studied nutrients in pure sorghum and roselle, but P <br/><br>
depletion was remarkably more severe in roselle systems. For all systems, P availability is the <br/><br>
major determinant of sustainability. The study demonstrated that OM was essential for positive <br/><br>
nutrient balances. Hence, intercropping is considered as an appropriate option to enhance soil <br/><br>
fertility. Ways for adjusting the negative balancesin the context of sustainability were suggested.}},
  author       = {{El Tahir, Bashir Awad and Daldoum, M.A. and Ardö, Jonas}},
  issn         = {{2310-7502}},
  keywords     = {{Organic carbon; Nutrient depletion; Sustainability; cropping seasons; Gum Arabic}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{5}},
  pages        = {{93--112}},
  publisher    = {{STANDARD RESEARCH JOURNALS}},
  series       = {{Standard Scientific Research and Essays}},
  title        = {{Nutrient Balances as Indicators of Sustainability in acacia senegal Land use Systems in the Semi-arid Zone of North Kordofan, Sudan}},
  url          = {{http://standresjournals.org/journals/SSRE/Pdf/2013/june/El%20Tahir%20et%20al.pdf}},
  volume       = {{1}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}