Alleviating an Acid Sulfate Soil Cultivated to Rice (Oryza sativa) Using Ground Magnesium Limestone and Organic Fertilizer
Abstract
Rice yield on acid sulfate soils in Malaysia is very low, presumably due to AI and/or Fe toxicity. This study wasconducted to ameliorate an acid sulfate soil in the Kemasin-Semerak Integrated Agricultural Development Project, located in Kelantan, Peninsular Malaysia, for rice cultivation. Rice variety, MR 219, was used as the test crop. Treatment included the use of various rates of ground magnesium limestone (GML), with or without an organic fertilizer. This acid sulfate soil had an initial pH of < 3.5 at depth below 45 cm. Exchangeable AI in the soil was high, especially in the subsoil. The first crop of rice was disturbed by floods. The result for the 2"d crop showed a promising trend; applying 4 t GMUha in combination with an organicfertilizer, the topsoil pH had increasedfrom 3.95 to 4.21, increasing the exchangeable Ca and Mgfrom 1.58 and 0.48 cmol/kg soil to 2.57 and O. 79 cmol/kg soil, respectively. In this treatment, the rice yield was 7.5 tlha, which was much higher than that produced by farmer's practice of about 2 tlha. The increase in yield was due to the combined effects of increasing pH and exchangeable Ca and Mg and of lowering AI and Fe concentration in the soil solution.
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Published
2007-04-01
How to Cite
SuswantoT., ShamshuddinJ., OmarS. S., MatP., & TehC. (2007). Alleviating an Acid Sulfate Soil Cultivated to Rice (Oryza sativa) Using Ground Magnesium Limestone and Organic Fertilizer. Jurnal Ilmu Tanah Dan Lingkungan, 9(1), 1-9. https://doi.org/10.29244/jitl.9.1.1-9
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Articles
Department of Soil Science and Land Resources Departemen Ilmu Tanah dan Sumberdaya Lahan, Faculty of Agriculture Fakultas Pertanian, IPB University