Izham Ahmad, Yahya Awang and Zamani Omar
Growth of wild durian seedlings (Durio lowianus)
planted on six different media [100% coconut coir dust (CCD);
2 CCD: 1 sand; 1 CCD: 1 sand; 100% peat, 1 CCD: 1 peat; and 3
soil: 2 sand: 2 organic matter: 1 POME] was evaluated for six
months. Differences in leaf number were marked at the four
month after planting with plants grown on soil-based medium
produced more leaves than the other media. At the sixth month,
plants grown on soil-based medium had 41 leaves while leaf
number for other media were between 17 and 27. similar trend
of results were detected for plant height and stem diameter
but marked differences in the two parameters were only noticed
at five months after planting. Stem diameter of plants grown
on soil-based medium was 26% larger than those grown on other
media. Plants grown on soil-based media also had the largest
number of branches (6.4/plant). This was followed by those
grown on 100% peat (4.4/plant). The number of branches for
other treatments were generally fewer, ranging from 2.0 to 2.9
per plant.
Mineralogy and Sand Surface Morphology of Selected
Andisols from West Sumatra
D. Fiantis, J. Shamsuddin, E. Van Ranst, S. Zauyah and
I. Fauziah
Andisols from Mt. Marapi and Mt. Pasaman in west
Sumatra, Indonesia were studied to characterize their
mineralogy and the surface morphology of the sand grains. The
minerals in the sand grains included quartz, plagioclase,
hornblende, augite, hypersthene, olivine and volcanic glass
having different surface morphology. The morphology surface
features present are bubbles, pitted, curve platy and
sponge-like. Some of the sand grains are coated with amorphous
materials. Halloysite is confirmed by the presence of strong
peaks of Si and Al and a weak peak of Fe on the SEM-EDX
spectra. The clay fraction is composed mainly of allophane,
cristobalite, feldspars and halloysite. Soils from the Mt.
Pasaman have some gibbsite, while those of the Mt. Marapi have
opaline silica in the surface horizons. The abundance of
opaline silica tends to decrease with the age of the volcanic
ash soils.
Land Use System in an Acid Sulfate Soil of Central
Kalimantan, Indonesia
S. Muhrizal and J. Shamsuddin
Large reclamation projects in south and central
Kalimantan, Indonesia during the 1980s by constructing
irrigation and drainage canals have made large tracks of acid
sulfate and peat soils available for agricultural use.
However, the reclamation has resulted in environmental
degradation f\due to the release of toxic substances such as
iron, aluminum and sulfate because of pyrite oxidation. We
assessed the pollution from different types of land use
constructed in acid sulfate soils. This monitoring study
during the rainy season of 1996/97 (December 1996-march 1997)
was carried out at unit Tatas Experimental Station in central
Kalimantan, Indonesia. Leachates were collected and analyzed
for pH, Fe, Al and SO42 in the drain water from different
kinds of land use systems namely: raised bed system, shallow
drainage system, flooded rice system with intermittent
drainage, rain-fed rice system and secondary forest system.
The soils is a sulfic hydaquents, extremely acid with dark
humic topsoil (0-15 cm) and a uniformly brown layer (25 - 95
cm) without jarosite. The sulphidic material (pyrite) is below
95 - cm depth. The lowest pH value of drained water from
several land uses was 2.6 occurring during the height rainfall
(January). The value increased to 3.2 in March when the
rainfall decreased. This suggests that oxidation occurring dry
season (between June- September/October) when the water table
dropped down to the pyrite layer produced a high amount of
acidity and this was leached out during the first month of dry
spell thus lowering the pH. The concentration of Al and Fe
were in the opposite direction. The trend was more noticeable
under upland rice condition and secondary forest compared to
the other land use types. For all the land use types, sulfate
was released in great amounts to the environment, and this was
followed by Al and Fe. Pollution from acid sulfate soils was
probably the greatest during the onset of high rainfall.
Potential use of Rhizobacteria for Sustainable Oil Palm
Seedling Production
H.G. Amir, Z.H. Shamsuddin, M.S. Halimi, M.F. Ramlan and
M. Marziah
Associative nitrogen fixing rhizobacteria (e.g.
Azospirillum and Bacillus spp.) have been reported to enhance
growth and fix N2 with several non-leguminous crops. These
rhizobacteria have the potential to reduce application of
nitrogenous fertilizer and consequently reduce costs for the
Malaysian palm oil industry. Thus, the objectives of the
experiments were; 1) to quantify N2 fixing capacity of
Azospirillum spp. And locally isolated rhizobacteria on growth
of the host plants. Two experiments were conducted in UPM
glasshouse (undrained pots) and at FELDA Bukit Mandi Nursery
Field Station (drained pots) with Selangor series soil at 8
kg/pot. For the undrained pot study, the soil was maintained
at field capacity. The soils was labeled with 15N by adding
100 ml/pot of (15NH4)2SO4, 10 % i.e but not for the drained
pot study in the field. Newly germinated oil palm seeds were
planted at one seed/pot with seven treatments and five
replicates, arranged in a randomized complete block design and
harvested at two different intervals. 130 and 260 days after
planting (D130 and D260). Each pot was inoculated with the
respective inoculum treatment (killed inoculum (controls),
Azospirillum bransilense (sp 7), A. lipoferum (CCM 1863),
locally isolated rhizobacteria Bacillus sphaericus (UPMN 10)
and B. subtilis (UPMN 13) at planting and at two monthly
intervals. The n2 fixation rate was analyzed by emission
spectrometer at Malaysian Institute for Nuclear Technology
Research (MINT). Results showed that the inoculation of
Azospirillum and the bacillus spp. In the glasshouse
experiment could successfully fix N2 (30-40% Ndfa) in
association with the host plants. The inoculation process also
stimulated plant growth (tops and roots) comparable to the
control with fertilizer-N,. the experiments indicated that
Azospirillum and Bacillus spp. Can be regarded as a potential
biofertilizer and bioenhancer for sustainable oil palm
seedling production. However,
mo07-Mar-2004
higher inoculum population in the soil especially for field
applications.
Oil palm Empty Fruit Bunch as a Source of Nutrients and
Soil Ameliorant in Oil Palm Plantation
A.R. Zaharah and K.C. Lim
A lysimeter study on the decomposition and
nutrient release from oil palm empty fruit bunch (EFB)
component parts (spikelet, stalk and mixture of stalk and
spikelet) was carried out with and without mineral N
fertilizers under field conditions over a period of nine
months. A field experiment was also conducted where 17
year-old oil palms were treated with different N and K
inorganic fertilizer rates, with and without EFB mulching. Two
years of yield data were collected and at the end of this
period, the soils were collected and analyzed for pH,
exchangeable Ca, Mg and K and organic C content. It was
observed that the EFB component parts decomposed at a
significantly different rates in the order of stalk >
mixture > spikelet. The decomposition pattern for all the
parts conforms to the double exponential model by which most
organic materials decompose. Lignin, polyphenol, carbon and
nitrogen content in the EFB showed good correlation with soil
N dynamics. The model identified was: soil min N = 20.45 -
25.02RN + 0.388PP + 0.47 LIG - 0.40 LIG/N (R2 = 0.80).
Application of EFB parts lead to complete soil N
immobilization for the entire 36 weeks of experimental period
accompanied by 80 - 88% loss of K, Mg and Ca. In mature oil
palm, application of inorganic N, EFB and N + EFB
significantly increase EFB yield. The soil chemical
characteristics like pH, organic C and exchangeable K were
significantly improved with EFB application, making EFB a
suitable ameliorant in improving soil quality for sustainable
oil palm production.
Effect of Arbuscular Mycorrhiza fungi Colonization on
Growth and Physiological Responses of Grafted Cocoa under
Field Conditions
M.V. Rini, T. Jamal, Z.A. Idris and H.
Azizah
The effect of mixed specis of arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) inoculum. Glomus mosseae Scutellospora
calospora on growth and physiology of cocoa was evaluated in
the field. A split-plot design was used with AM treatment as
the main plot and cocoa clones as the subplot. Five selected
cocoa clones (viz. KKM 3, KKM 4, KKM 5, PBC 178) were grafted
onto nine year-old cocoa (hybrid UIT1 x Na32) trees. Data were
collected at 3, 5, and 7 months after AMF inoculation.
Inoculated clones showed better and significant plants growth
with longer scion lengths and larger leaf area index compared
to uninoculated ones. The crop physiology was also
significantly affected by AMF clones. The most interesting
observation as a result of AMF inoculation was, inoculated PBC
clones flowered at 8.5 months after grafting while the KKM
clones flowered only at 12 months after grafting.