scholarly journals COMPOSITION OF TERMITES IN THREE DIFFERENT SOIL TYPES ACROSS OIL PALM AGROECOSYSTEM REGIONS IN RIAU (Indonesia) AND JOHOR (Peninsular Malaysia)

Author(s):  
ANDI SAPUTRA
Mycobiology ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 107-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yit Kheng Goh ◽  
Teik Khiang Goh ◽  
Nurul Fadhilah Marzuki ◽  
Hun Jiat Tung ◽  
You Keng Goh ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arolu Ayanda Fatai ◽  
Jusop Shamshuddin ◽  
Che Ishaq Fauziah ◽  
Othman Radziah ◽  
Mohsen Bohluli

Abstract. Most of the soils in the upland areas of Peninsular Malaysia are classified as Ultisols. Oil palm production on these soils is usually limited by their inherent low soil productivity. However, the crop is cultivated successfully on most of the soils following right soil management practices. A study was conducted in Bera, Malaysia to determine the characteristics and fertility of an Ultisol cropped to oil palm for many years continuously. In this study, the soil in the plantation was sampled, analyzed and classified. The soil under study was formed under tropical environment with udic moisture regime on fine-grained sedimentary rocks mixed with tuffs of Permian age. Due to very long exposure to the condition of high temperature and high rainfall throughout its development, the soil in the area was reddish in color, clayey, deep and highly weathered. The study found that the clay fraction of the soil was dominated by kaolinite, hematite, goethite and gibbsite; hence, the CEC and basic cations were low. Besides, soil reaction was acidic in nature with soil pH slightly below 5, but the exchangeable Al was more than 1 cmolc/kg soil. However, it was believed that these inherent characteristics were not expected to significantly affect the production of oil palm grown on the soil. With proper agronomic practices, the area can be utilized for oil palm production sustainably.


2013 ◽  
Vol 34 (20) ◽  
pp. 7424-7446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kian Pang Tan ◽  
Kasturi Devi Kanniah ◽  
Arthur Philip Cracknell

2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 941-949 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petra Sulai ◽  
Siti Nurhidayu ◽  
Najjib Aziz ◽  
Mohamed Zakaria ◽  
Holly Barclay ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tabitha C. Y. Hui ◽  
Eleanor M. Slade ◽  
Ju Lian Chong

As Malaysia’s economy continues to grow, an ever-expanding road network is being built to support the new developments. Whilst roads increase accessibility to resources and connect human communities, they also bring with them a host of environmental problems such as destruction and fragmentation of habitat, poaching, pollution, and roadkills. Of these, roadkills are the most direct and visible impact of building roads, yet few dedicated studies have been conducted on the extent of roadkills and how to minimize them in Malaysia. In this study, we examined the species richness and abundance of vertebrate roadkills along eight one-km stretches (two in each habitat) of highways in Terengganu and Pahang across four habitat types: rainforest, oil palm plantation, subsistence agricultural land, and village. Each stretch of highway was surveyed by walking it six times between May to October 2017 for the Terengganu segments and May to October 2018 for the Pahang segments. A total of 305 roadkilled animals were recorded, consisting of at least 24 species. Three of these are protected by Malaysian law. The most common roadkilled animals were frogs (102 individuals) followed by birds (70 individuals), mammals (67 individuals) and reptiles (66 individuals). The highest number of roadkills were recorded in roads going through villages (112 individuals), followed by oil palm plantations (81 individuals), forests (65 individuals) and subsistence agricultural land (47 individuals). For every roadkill we also recorded the location’s specific habitat and landscape characteristics such as distance to the nearest fruit tree, tree, shrub, water body, human structure, and overhead cable. Most roadkills were found close to vegetation cover and water bodies. However, we found that roadkills decreased to near zero between 30 and 80 m from the nearest shrub or tree. Roadkills decreased over larger distances from the nearest water body, but in oil palm and village habitats, reducing water bodies within 20–50 m from a road would almost half the number of roadkills. We suggest that making changes to the structure and composition of roadside vegetation and other landscape features, such as thinning vegetation to discourage wildlife from gathering near roads, could significantly reduce the number of roadkills.


Forests ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 858
Author(s):  
Nazarin Ezzaty Mohd Najib ◽  
Kasturi Devi Kanniah ◽  
Arthur P. Cracknell ◽  
Le Yu

Oil palm is recognized as a golden crop, as it produces the highest oil yield among oil seed crops. Malaysia is the world’s second largest producer of palm oil; 16% of its land is planted with oil palm. To cope with the ever-increasing global demand on edible oil, additional areas of oil palm are forecast to increase globally by 12 to 19 Mha by 2050. Multisensor remote sensing plays an important role in providing relevant, timely, and accurate information that can be developed into a plantation monitoring system to optimize production and sustainability. The aim of this study was to simultaneously exploit the synthetic aperture radar ALOS PALSAR 2, a form of microwave remote sensing, in combination with visible (red) data from Landsat Thematic Mapper to obtain a holistic view of a plantation. A manipulation of the horizontal–horizontal (HH) and horizontal–vertical (HV) polarizations of ALOS PALSAR data detected oil palm trees and water bodies, while the red spectra L-band from Landsat data (optical) could effectively identify built up areas and vertical–horizontal (VH) polarization from Sentinel C-band data detected bare land. These techniques produced an oil palm area classification with overall accuracies of 98.36% and 0.78 kappa coefficient for Peninsular Malaysia. The total oil palm area in Peninsular Malaysia was estimated to be about 3.48% higher than the value reported by the Malaysian Palm Oil Board. The over estimation may be due the MPOB’s statistics that do not include unregistered small holder oil palm plantations. In this study, we were able to discriminate most of the rubber areas.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 100287 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nur Shafira Nisa Shaharum ◽  
Helmi Zulhaidi Mohd Shafri ◽  
Wan Azlina Wan Ab Karim Ghani ◽  
Sheila Samsatli ◽  
Mohammed Mustafa Abdulrahman Al-Habshi ◽  
...  

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