Author:
BIDEGAIN R. A.,KAEMMERER M.,GUIRESSE M.,HAFIDI M.,REY F.,MORARD P.,REVEL J. C.
Abstract
Two organic fertilizers were prepared from the same initial mixture of poplar sawdust, blood and
flour either by composting in a reactor or by chemical oxidation. Both processes resulted in loss of
c. 30% of the organic matter. Composting required 90 days in comparison to only a few hours with
chemical oxidation. Extraction of the organic residues with 1 N KOH gave solutions containing 24·6
and 15·1 g/l of humic substances respectively. These humic solutions were applied to pot-grown
Lolium multiflorum Lam. at 4 and 10 mg carbon per pot to assess the short-term uptake of macro and
microelements by the plants. When the plants were short of phosphorus, the humic substances from
the chemically decomposed sawdust supplied at 10 mg C per pot improved total P uptake and yield.
Humic substances also increased copper and manganese uptake, and by enhancing root development,
also improved nitrogen uptake and biomass yield.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
18 articles.
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