EFFECTS OF IRRIGATION ONPROSOPIS JULIFLORAAND SOIL PROPERTIES OF AN ALKALI SOIL
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Tree Crops Journal
- Vol. 6 (2-3) , 81-99
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01435698.1990.9752876
Abstract
Field studies on an alkali soil (Aquic Natrustalf, pH 10.4 and ESP 90) examined the performance of Prosopis juliflora (SW) DC under irrigated and rainfed conditions. After 2 years, plant mortality was respectively 36 and 9 per cent in the rainfed and irrigated treatments; and mean plant height and diameter at 5 cm above ground level were respectively 137.0 cm and 2.1 cm in the rainfed treatment and 214.0 cm and 2.8 cm in the irrigated treatment. Biomass productivity in the irrigated treatment was three times that in the rainfed treatment. Water use efficiency was also higher in the irrigated treatment due to the higher biomass yield. There was little difference between the chemical composition of the parts of plants grown under rainfed and irrigated conditions. Irrigation resulted in an appreciable decrease in pH and electrical conductivity, a significant increase in water infiltration characteristics, and a more uniform distribution of moisture throughout the soil.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Long‐term Effects of Mesquite Removal on Soil Characteristics: I. Nutrients and Bulk DensitySoil Science Society of America Journal, 1986
- Effects of Irrigation on Biomass Production of 32 Prosopis (Mesquite) AccessionsExperimental Agriculture, 1983
- Nutrient content of standing crop and biological cycling in Pinus patula ecosystemForest Ecology and Management, 1982
- Seasonal dynamics of nitrogen cycling for a Prosopis woodland in the Sonoran DesertPlant and Soil, 1982
- Uses of tree legumes in semiarid regionsEconomic Botany, 1981
- Effect of Mesquite on Physical and Chemical Properties of the SoilJournal of Range Management, 1973
- Photosynthesis of Tropical Pasture Plantsiv. Basis and Consequences of Differences Between Grasses and LegumesAustralian Journal of Biological Sciences, 1972
- A rapid method for determining sulphate in water extracts of soilsThe Analyst, 1963
- Exchangeability of Soil Potassium in the Sand, Silt, and Clay Fractions as Influenced by the Nature of the Complementary Exchangeable CationSoil Science Society of America Journal, 1951
- AN EXAMINATION OF THE DEGTJAREFF METHOD FOR DETERMINING SOIL ORGANIC MATTER, AND A PROPOSED MODIFICATION OF THE CHROMIC ACID TITRATION METHODSoil Science, 1934