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Exchangeable aluminium as an index of liming for the acidic upland soils of Kerala

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dc.contributor.advisor Alice Abraham
dc.contributor.author Meena, K
dc.date.accessioned 2021-03-06T05:41:34Z
dc.date.available 2021-03-06T05:41:34Z
dc.date.issued 1987
dc.identifier.citation T-409 en_US
dc.identifier.sici T-409 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/10148
dc.description.abstract Aluminium toxicity is the major factor limiting crop production in the acidic soils and the usual practice of alleviating aluminium toxicity is liming* / The present investigation was carried out to find out the distribution of water s dluhle and exchangeable aluminium in the acidic upland soils of Kerala and to test the suitability of exchangeable aluminium as an index for liming them* It was further programmed to find out the growth, yield and nutrient uptake pattern of two acid sensitive crops namely cowpea and fodder maize in soils under different levels of exchangeable aluminium brought out by the use of different levels of lime* Chemical analysis of eighty soil samples representing the five major upland soil types of Kerala viz* laterlte, alluvial, red loam, sandy and forest a oil have indicated the highest amount of exchangeable aluminium and percentage aluminium saturation in the laterite soils* The soil with 3 high level of exchangeable aluminium and percentage aluminium saturation was selected for conducting a pot culture experiment to test the suitability of using exchangeable aluminium as an index of liming* The exchangeable aluminium content of this soil was maintained at different levels by applying different levels of lime and the performance of these crops in this soil was compared by making biometric observations and by chemically analysing plant and soil samples* From the results of the study it was seen that higher levels of exchangeable aluminium adversely affected the growth, yield and nutrient uptake In cowpea and fodder maize* Maintenance of exchangeable aluminium at 1*26 me/100 g with a corresponding percentage aluminium saturation valua of around 30, by the use of 500 kg lime/ha appeared to be the optimum for maximising the yield of cowpea* But in fodder maize this level of lime was found to be insufficient and complete elimination of aluminium toxicity appeared to be essential for maximising production* Since the critical levels of exchangeable aiuainiua appears to be different for different crop3, it is desirable that lias levels to reduce exchangeable aluminium to such a critical level alono be applied. The results of the present study thus point to the advantage in adopting the exchangeable aluminium level of soil as a better index of liming for various crops grown in the upland acidic soils of Kerala. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Department of soil science and agricultural chemistry, College of Agriculture, Vellayani en_US
dc.subject Soil Science and Agricultural Chemistry en_US
dc.title Exchangeable aluminium as an index of liming for the acidic upland soils of Kerala en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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