EFFECT OF SOIL PUDDLING AND PREVIOUS CROP ON SOME SOIL PROPERTIES AND RICE PRODUCTIVITY IN CLAY SOILS

2013 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 85-92
Author(s):  
A. S. El-Henawy
2019 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Mohamed I. Mohaseb ◽  
Mona H. M. Kenawy ◽  
Khaled A. H. Shaban

A field experiment (randomized complete blocks with three replicates) was conducted during two successive summer seasons of 2016 and 2017 at Sahl El-Houssinia Agriculture Research Station in El-Shakia Governorate, Egypt. Its lies between 32˚00/00 to 32˚15/00/ N latitude and 30˚50 / 00// to 31˚15 00// E longitude. The combined effect of bio-fertilizers inoculated with Rhizobium radiobacter sp strain (salt tolerant PGPR); Bacillus megatherium (dissolving phosphate) and Bacillus circulans (enhancing potassium availability) and yeast strains (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) combined with different rates of N, P and K fertilizers (50, 75 and 100%) was evaluated on some soil properties, nutrient content in rice plants, and rice productivity in a reclaimed saline soil. From the crop field of the Agricultural Research Institute (ARC), Egypt, 101 grain kernels from rice (Oryza sativa) var. Sakha were selected.   The results indicated that soil pH and EC were decreased in soil treated with bio-fertilizers combined with different rates of mineral fertilizers in comparison with soil treated with yeast and control. Available N, P, K, Fe, Mn and Zn in the soil increased with the use of bio-fertilizers. Application of mineral fertilizers (N, P and K) alone or combined with bio-fertilizers (bacteria and yeast) resulted in increased yield grains and straw of rice plant. Macro- and micronutrients concentrations and uptake in grain and straw of rice plants increased in soil treated with bacteria + 75% N+P+K fertilizers compared with other treatments.                          


Weed Science ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 648-654 ◽  
Author(s):  
David H. Johnson ◽  
J. Dwayne Beaty ◽  
Diana K. Horton ◽  
Ronald E. Talbert ◽  
Charles B. Guy ◽  
...  

Experiments were conducted from 1989 to 1991 on two silt loam and two clay soils to determine the effect of herbicides applied to the previous crop on growth and yield of rice. All herbicides were applied preplant-incorporated at recommended rates adjusted as needed for soil texture. Rice was planted the following year. Imazaquin, imazethapyr, alachlor, metolachlor, clomazone, trifluralin, and atrazine did not injure rice the year following application. Norflurazon was the only herbicide to injure rice on silt loam soils, with injury at one silt loam location in one of two years. Norflurazon and fluometuron residues caused rice injury on clay soils, and chlorimuron residues caused injury in one year on a day soil. This chlorimuron carryover injury was from August-planted soybean but did not occur from June-planted soybean. Norflurazon, fluometuron, and chlorimuron temporarily reduced rice dry matter early in the season. No herbicide reduced either rough rice or percent head rice yield on any of the soils.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (15) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed Mohammed Saad Kheir ◽  
Hesham Mahmoud Abouelsoud ◽  
Emad Maher Hafez ◽  
Osama Ali Mohamed Ali

2010 ◽  
Vol 14 (6) ◽  
pp. 979-990 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Y. Liu ◽  
J. P. Evans ◽  
M. F. McCabe ◽  
R. A. M. de Jeu ◽  
A. I. J. M. van Dijk ◽  
...  

Abstract. Vertisols are clay soils that are common in the monsoonal and dry warm regions of the world. One of the characteristics of these soil types is to form deep cracks during periods of extended dry, resulting in significant variation of the soil and hydrologic properties. Understanding the influence of these varying soil properties on the hydrological behavior of the system is of considerable interest, particularly in the retrieval or simulation of soil moisture. In this study we compare surface soil moisture (θ in m3 m−3) retrievals from AMSR-E using the VUA-NASA (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam in collaboration with NASA) algorithm with simulations from the Community Land Model (CLM) over vertisol regions of mainland Australia. For the three-year period examined here (2003–2005), both products display reasonable agreement during wet periods. During dry periods however, AMSR-E retrieved near surface soil moisture falls below values for surrounding non-clay soils, while CLM simulations are higher. CLM θ are also higher than AMSR-E and their difference keeps increasing throughout these dry periods. To identify the possible causes for these discrepancies, the impacts of land use, topography, soil properties and surface temperature used in the AMSR-E algorithm, together with vegetation density and rainfall patterns, were investigated. However these do not explain the observed θ responses. Qualitative analysis of the retrieval model suggests that the most likely reason for the low AMSR-E θ is the increase in soil porosity and surface roughness resulting from cracking of the soil. To quantitatively identify the role of each factor, more in situ measurements of soil properties that can represent different stages of cracking need to be collected. CLM does not simulate the behavior of cracking soils, including the additional loss of moisture from the soil continuum during drying and the infiltration into cracks during rainfall events, which results in overestimated θ when cracks are present. The hydrological influence of soil physical changes are expected to propagate through the modeled system, such that modeled infiltration, evaporation, surface temperature, surface runoff and groundwater recharge should be interpreted with caution over these soil types when cracks might be present. Introducing temporally dynamic roughness and soil porosity into retrieval algorithms and adding a "cracking clay" module into models are expected to improve the representation of vertisol hydrology.


Soil Research ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
RH Gunn

Deep weathering in the upper layers of basalt flows in central Queensland led to the deveIopment of lateritic profiles with a surface cover of leached red clay soils overlying ferruginous and mottled zones. Subsequent erosion and bevelling of the weathered mantle left small residuals of the old surface and exposed the underlying weathered zones. In places the mantle was completely removed to uncover fresh rock. A soil catena comprising six zones with associated discrete plant communities developed in these landscapes. Soil differences are related to variations in the intensity of weathering of parent materials and the leaching, translocation, and precipitation of differentially soluble and mobile constituents of the parent rock. The sequence of clay minerals is kaolinite -->kaolinite + randomly interstratified material + montmorillonite --> montmorillonite. The distribution of the plant communities is closeIy associated with variations in soil properties, particularly those which affect water relationships.


2010 ◽  
Vol 168-170 ◽  
pp. 1566-1571
Author(s):  
Bo Liu ◽  
Li Huang ◽  
Guo Gang Qiao ◽  
Tao Li

Soil improvement is one of the most important problems to be solved for shielding tunneling in the complex strata. Now the foam modifying soils technique has been widely used in shield tunneling construction. A new foaming agent used for soil properties improvement is developed and presented in this paper. This paper presents test research of soil properties improvement on sand in rich-water strata and clay soils from permeability, fluidity, compressibility and shear strength. Compared with the imported and domestic foaming agent, the basic performances of the newly developed foaming agent are obtained. Some conclusions are drawn in the paper, and it is significant to improve the engineering properties of soil and reduce the ground damage in shield tunneling construction.


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