Soil Health of Rubber Plantations in Southern Côte D'ivoire: The Case of Cnra Anguédédou Rubber Plantations

Djézou, Konan and Fernand, Yao Guy and Thierry, Lekadou Tacra and Armand, Amani Abissaley Boris and Antoine, Koffi and Dogniméton, Soro (2024) Soil Health of Rubber Plantations in Southern Côte D'ivoire: The Case of Cnra Anguédédou Rubber Plantations. International Journal of Plant & Soil Science, 36 (7). pp. 10-19. ISSN 2320-7035

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Abstract

The rubber tree, a species of Amazonian forest tree, is cultivated for its natural rubber-rich latex. Its cultivation is of economic, social, climatic and environmental importance. However, it has been criticized as a soil-destroying crop. To clear up this ambiguity, a study was launched to assess the health of soils under rubber cover in southern Côte d'Ivoire. The methodology involved selecting rubber plantations of [1 to 5 years], [6 to 10 years], [11 to 20] and [20-40 years], and two (02) 42-year-old rubber tree plantations, abandoned for 8 years, were compared to those of a forest. In these biotopes, soil samples were taken using an auger and a metal cylinder, then analyzed in the laboratory to determine soil fertility and ecological parameters. The results showed that the saturated soils of young plantations aged 6 to 10 years are poor in organic matter and cation exchange capacity, mainly calcium and magnesium. However, organic carbon stocks are high in abandoned plantations (182.38 mg/ha) and plantations over 20 years old (164.5 mg/ha). The assessed deterioration index reveals that soils in young plantations aged 6 to 10 years are degraded, with an SDI = -40%. These soils recovered as the plantations aged, with a SDI of 151% in abandoned plantations.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM Library > Agricultural and Food Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 30 May 2024 05:49
Last Modified: 30 May 2024 06:59
URI: http://open.journal4submit.com/id/eprint/3908

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