Published October 3, 2018 | Version v1
Journal article Open

SOIL-PLANT DEGRADATION AND THEIR INTER-RELATION AT SALINE DESERT ECOSYSTEM.

  • 1. P.G. Memorial College, J.C.D. Vidyapeeth, Sirsa-125055.
  • 2. Department of Biosciences, Saurashtra University, Rajkot-360005.

Description

High salinity is contributing significantly to environmental degradation. Saline desert (Little Rann of Kutch of 4860 ha) was selected to study soil and vegetation. Soil was analyzed at different depth 0-15, 15-30 and 30-45cm. Maximum salinity was 24.033dSm-1. Mean values for FC, WHC, OC, N, P, Ca, K and Na were 20.456%, 28.250%, 0.344%, 0.030%, 22.727kg ha-1, 103.293mg kg-1, 841.276mg kg-1 and 144.395mg kg-1. Calcium and herbaceous density (153.601mg kg-1 and 0.646plants m-2) was maximum and sodium (65.490mg kg-1) was minimum (site two). Results suggest that calcium have beneficial effect to overcome salinity and minimise the effect of sodium in the soil.

Files

25.pdf

Files (608.0 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:2e8e8a049ad26272d1769f9a8d6f6f03
608.0 kB Preview Download