Effects of planting basins and farmyard manure addition on soil carbon and nitrogen pools under on‐farm conditions in Makueni county of Kenya

Author:

Kichamu‐Wachira Edith1ORCID,Xu Zhihong1,Reardon‐Smith Kathryn2,Winowiecki Leigh Ann3,Ayele Gebiaw4,Biggs Duan15,Magaju Christine3,Taresh Sabah16,Hosseini‐Bai Shahla1,Omidvar Negar1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Planetary Health and Food Security, School of Environment and Science Griffith University Brisbane Queensland Australia

2. Centre for Applied Climate Sciences University of Southern Queensland Toowoomba Queensland Australia

3. World Agroforestry (ICRAF) Nairobi Kenya

4. Australian Rivers Institute, School of Engineering Griffith University Nathan Queensland Australia

5. Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona USA

6. Date Palm Research Centre University of Basrah Basrah Iraq

Abstract

AbstractClimate change, land degradation and inadequate soil nutrients pose significant threats to food security and agricultural sustainability. This study aims to examine the effects of planting basins with farmyard manure on soil total carbon (C), nitrogen (N), isotopic C (δ13C) and N (δ15N) compositions within smallholder‐managed farms in Makueni County, Kenya. The study involved two management practices: planting basins with manure (PM) and conventional farming practices (FP) in 12 experimental sites. Soil samples were taken at three depths (0–10, 10–20 and 20–40 cm), with three replicates for each treatment. Significant interactions were observed between land management practices and sites as well as land management practices and soil depth on soil total C and N. At each of the 12 sites, soil total C was higher under PM (ranging from 0.44% to 1.86%, p < .05) than FP management (ranging from 0.35% to 1.37%), across all soil depths. Soil total N concentrations ranged from 0.027% to 0.100% under FP and (0.060% to 0.190%, p < .05) under PM management. Across soil depths, higher (less negative) soil δ13C values were observed under conventional farmer practice (range − 22.5‰ to −17.1‰) compared with PM management range (−24.3‰ to −18.1‰). Soil δ15N was significantly enriched under PM management (range: 7.4‰ to 12.6‰, p < .05) compared with the conventional farmer practices (range: 6.1‰ to 9.8‰, p < .05). The findings show that planting basins with farmyard manure offers both climate mitigation and adaptation benefits by increasing soil C contents and improving soil fertility. The study provides insights into the real‐world implications of these practices, emphasizing the potential of planting basins with manure in enhancing soil quality and climate resilience.

Funder

International Fund for Agricultural Development

Griffith University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pollution,Soil Science,Agronomy and Crop Science

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