The effect of natural zeolites and organic fertilisers on the characteristics of degraded soils and yield of crops grown in western Serbia
Апстракт
Soils with unfavourable characteristics (pronounced acidity, disturbed structure, compaction, exhaustion, tiredness, etc.) cover a considerable area of Serbia. Specific crops, the fruit ones in particular, are being grown on these soils, yielding, however, considerably lower yields. The paper presents results of two-year studies on the effect of natural zeolites, organic fertiliser-cattle manure and mineral NPK fertiliser (15:15:15) on soil properties and fruit yield and fruit properties of strawberry and blackberry plants grown on shallow eroded vertisol. The results have shown that the chemical properties of the soil improved with the natural zeolite 'Agrozel' (1 kg m(-2)) + Manure (1 kg m(-2)) treatment-resulting in a 0-94-unit acidity decrease and a 0-58% humus content increase at a 0-20 cm soil depth. Positive but less pronounced changes were also detected at greater soil depths. The strawberry and blackberry cultivation in these soils using the above substances gave rise to a yie...ld increase. In the second year of study, strawberry and blackberry yields increased by 13-15% and 6.27%, respectively. Basic chemical properties of strawberry and blackberry fruits (soluble solids and total acid contents) were not significantly affected by zeolite and organic fertiliser additions to the soil.
Кључне речи:
zeolites / strawberry / Serbia / manure / degraded soil / blackberryИзвор:
Land Degradation & Development, 2009, 20, 1, 33-40Издавач:
- Wiley, Hoboken
Финансирање / пројекти:
- Ministry of Science of the Republic of Serbia [(1996-2004) 021340]
DOI: 10.1002/ldr.875
ISSN: 1085-3278
WoS: 000263453400004
Scopus: 2-s2.0-68649107940
Институција/група
Institut za voćarstvoTY - JOUR AU - Glišić, Ivan P. AU - Milošević, Tomo AU - Glišić, Ivana AU - Milošević, Nebojša PY - 2009 UR - https://refri.institut-cacak.org/handle/123456789/138 AB - Soils with unfavourable characteristics (pronounced acidity, disturbed structure, compaction, exhaustion, tiredness, etc.) cover a considerable area of Serbia. Specific crops, the fruit ones in particular, are being grown on these soils, yielding, however, considerably lower yields. The paper presents results of two-year studies on the effect of natural zeolites, organic fertiliser-cattle manure and mineral NPK fertiliser (15:15:15) on soil properties and fruit yield and fruit properties of strawberry and blackberry plants grown on shallow eroded vertisol. The results have shown that the chemical properties of the soil improved with the natural zeolite 'Agrozel' (1 kg m(-2)) + Manure (1 kg m(-2)) treatment-resulting in a 0-94-unit acidity decrease and a 0-58% humus content increase at a 0-20 cm soil depth. Positive but less pronounced changes were also detected at greater soil depths. The strawberry and blackberry cultivation in these soils using the above substances gave rise to a yield increase. In the second year of study, strawberry and blackberry yields increased by 13-15% and 6.27%, respectively. Basic chemical properties of strawberry and blackberry fruits (soluble solids and total acid contents) were not significantly affected by zeolite and organic fertiliser additions to the soil. PB - Wiley, Hoboken T2 - Land Degradation & Development T1 - The effect of natural zeolites and organic fertilisers on the characteristics of degraded soils and yield of crops grown in western Serbia EP - 40 IS - 1 SP - 33 VL - 20 DO - 10.1002/ldr.875 UR - conv_1373 ER -
@article{ author = "Glišić, Ivan P. and Milošević, Tomo and Glišić, Ivana and Milošević, Nebojša", year = "2009", abstract = "Soils with unfavourable characteristics (pronounced acidity, disturbed structure, compaction, exhaustion, tiredness, etc.) cover a considerable area of Serbia. Specific crops, the fruit ones in particular, are being grown on these soils, yielding, however, considerably lower yields. The paper presents results of two-year studies on the effect of natural zeolites, organic fertiliser-cattle manure and mineral NPK fertiliser (15:15:15) on soil properties and fruit yield and fruit properties of strawberry and blackberry plants grown on shallow eroded vertisol. The results have shown that the chemical properties of the soil improved with the natural zeolite 'Agrozel' (1 kg m(-2)) + Manure (1 kg m(-2)) treatment-resulting in a 0-94-unit acidity decrease and a 0-58% humus content increase at a 0-20 cm soil depth. Positive but less pronounced changes were also detected at greater soil depths. The strawberry and blackberry cultivation in these soils using the above substances gave rise to a yield increase. In the second year of study, strawberry and blackberry yields increased by 13-15% and 6.27%, respectively. Basic chemical properties of strawberry and blackberry fruits (soluble solids and total acid contents) were not significantly affected by zeolite and organic fertiliser additions to the soil.", publisher = "Wiley, Hoboken", journal = "Land Degradation & Development", title = "The effect of natural zeolites and organic fertilisers on the characteristics of degraded soils and yield of crops grown in western Serbia", pages = "40-33", number = "1", volume = "20", doi = "10.1002/ldr.875", url = "conv_1373" }
Glišić, I. P., Milošević, T., Glišić, I.,& Milošević, N.. (2009). The effect of natural zeolites and organic fertilisers on the characteristics of degraded soils and yield of crops grown in western Serbia. in Land Degradation & Development Wiley, Hoboken., 20(1), 33-40. https://doi.org/10.1002/ldr.875 conv_1373
Glišić IP, Milošević T, Glišić I, Milošević N. The effect of natural zeolites and organic fertilisers on the characteristics of degraded soils and yield of crops grown in western Serbia. in Land Degradation & Development. 2009;20(1):33-40. doi:10.1002/ldr.875 conv_1373 .
Glišić, Ivan P., Milošević, Tomo, Glišić, Ivana, Milošević, Nebojša, "The effect of natural zeolites and organic fertilisers on the characteristics of degraded soils and yield of crops grown in western Serbia" in Land Degradation & Development, 20, no. 1 (2009):33-40, https://doi.org/10.1002/ldr.875 ., conv_1373 .