Enhancing Agronomic Efficiency of P Fertilizer through Integration with Agricultural Lime Coffee Husk Ash and Charcoal on Faba Bean (Vicia faba L.) Grown in Acidic Soil of Masha District Ethiopia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24925/turjaf.v7i2.320-324.2296Keywords:
Agronomic, Coffee, Husk, Acidic, SoilAbstract
Poor soil fertility is important constraints that limited crop production in Ethiopia. The Masha district was highly prone to phosphorus fixation with ions like Aluminum ion since soil of the area is prone to acidity. This experiment was therefore conducted to investigate the effect of of phosphorus fertilizer with agricultural lime, coffee husk ash and coffee husk charcoal on yield of faba bean and agronomic efficiency of the fertilizer on acidic soils of Masha district. Field experiment involving two rates of phosphorus (23 and 46 kg P2O5/ha) and the three soil amendments was in randomized complete block design with three replication. The result indicated that significantly high grain yield was obtained from integrated application of 46 kg P2O5/ha with the agricultural lime, coffee husk ash and coffee husk charcoal with the observed values of 2265, 1953 and 1943 kg/ha, respectively. Agronomic efficiency significantly great values were obtained from treated with the agricultural lime+23 kg P2O5/ha, agricultural lime+46 kg P2O5/ha, coffee husk ash+23 kg P2O5/ha and coffee husk charcoal+23 kg P2O5/ha with the observed values of 14.86, 14.60 and 10.07, respectively. It can be concluded that 46 kg P2O5 with 2.5 ton agricultural lime, 7.5 ton coffee husk ash or 7.5 ton coffee husk charcoal per hectare on acid soils for high yield and yield components on faba bean at Masha district. When 23 kg P2O5/ha was integrated with the soil amendments, relatively high agronomic efficiency was observed.Downloads
Published
24.02.2019
How to Cite
Kebede, T. T., & Weldesenbet, M. (2019). Enhancing Agronomic Efficiency of P Fertilizer through Integration with Agricultural Lime Coffee Husk Ash and Charcoal on Faba Bean (Vicia faba L.) Grown in Acidic Soil of Masha District Ethiopia. Turkish Journal of Agriculture - Food Science and Technology, 7(2), 320–324. https://doi.org/10.24925/turjaf.v7i2.320-324.2296
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Research Paper
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.