Results 251 to 260 of about 27,964 (306)

Aluminum detoxification with green manures

Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis, 1989
Abstract A greenhouse experiment was conducted to evaluate “liming”; potential of different green manures. Ground leafy materials of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata), leucaena (Leucaena leucocephala) and guinea grass (Panicum maximum) were added at 0, 5, 10 and 20 g/kg to an Ultisol having a soil‐water pH 4.0, KCl‐extractable Al = 7.6 cmoLc/kg, Al saturation
Hue, N., Amien, I.
exaly   +3 more sources

Green Manuring

Agronomy Journal, 1928
Scanned PDF of Green ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Green leaf manuring and green manuring

Madras Agricultural Journal, 1950
The terms "Green Leaf Manuring" and "Green Manuring" convey technically different meanings, though the ultimate object is the same in both cases. The practice of lopping green leaves from trees like Pungam, Neem etc., and applying them to paddy fields is called "Green Leaf Manuring." When crops like Pillipesra, Daincha, Sunnhemp, Indigo and Wild Indigo
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Green manuring

Outlook on Agriculture, 1984
Green manuring can be defined as the growth of a crop for the specific purpose of incorporating it into soil while green, or soon after maturity, with a view to improving the soil and benefiting subsequent crops. This definition excludes the incorporation of crop residues and short leys which are grown as forage or conservation crops.
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Green Manure Crops for the South

2023
In this study we are concerned especially with the adaptation and relatlve value of the different green manure crops for the South. ; The cover page reads "A Thesis submitted to the Graduate Faculty for the Degree of Master of Science, Major Subject: Crop Production." Degree granted by Iowa State College, 1945.
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Manures and Green-manuring

1923
Malayan Agricultural Journal, Volume 11, Issue 7-9, pp.
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Green Manuring in the Tropics

1982
The main practices of green manuring in Sri Lanka, as well as in other tropical countries, are described as far as their contribution to soil restauration and/or conservation is concerned. The use of legumes as food crops, fiber cros, as well as shade crops is particularly emphazised.
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Aeschynomene as green manure for rice

Plant and Soil, 1987
A preliminary investigation was conducted in 1 m2 microplots using two stem nodulatedAeschynomene species,A. afraspera andA. nilotica, to evaluate their beneficial effects as green manure on the yield and the nitrogen content of rice.A. afraspera andA. nilotica yielded 7.5 and 9.2 kg m−2 of fresh matter, (42.3 and 53.2 g N m−2 respectively) in 7 weeks ...
D. Alazard, M. Becker
openaire   +1 more source

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