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Journal ArticleDOI

Leaf litter decomposition of Piper aduncum, Gliricidia sepium and Imperata cylindrica in the humid lowlands of Papua New Guinea

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TLDR
Piper leaf litter is a significant and easily decomposable source of K which is an important nutrient for sweet potato and the decomposition and nutrient release patterns had significant effects on the soil.
Abstract
No information is available on the decomposition and nutrient release pattern of Piper aduncum and Imperata cylindrica despite their importance in shifting cultivation systems of Papua New Guinea and other tropical regions. We conducted a litter bag study (24 weeks) on a Typic Eutropepts in the humid lowlands to assess the rate of decomposition of Piper aduncum, Imperata cylindrica and Gliricidia sepium leaves under sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas). Decomposition rates of piper leaf litter were fastest followed closely by gliricidia, and both lost 50% of the leaf biomass within 10 weeks. Imperata leaf litter decomposed much slower and half-life values exceeded the period of observation. The decomposition patterns were best explained by the lignin plus polyphenol over N ratio which was lowest for piper (4.3) and highest for imperata (24.7). Gliricidia leaf litter released 79 kg N ha(-1), whereas 18 kg N ha(-1) was immobilised in the imperata litter. The mineralization of P was similar for the three species, but piper litter released large amounts of K. The decomposition and nutrient release patterns had significant effects on the soil. The soil contained significantly more water in the previous imperata plots at 13 weeks due to the relative slow decomposition of the leaves. Soil N levels were significantly reduced in the previous imperata plots due to immobilisation of N. Levels of exchangeable K were significantly increased in the previous piper plots due to the large addition of K. It can be concluded that piper leaf litter is a significant and easily decomposable source of K which is an important nutrient for sweet potato. Gliricidia leaf litter contained much N, whereas imperata leaf litter releases relatively little nutrients and keeps the soil more moist. Gliricidia fallow is more attractive than an imperata fallow for it improves the soil fertility and produces fuelwood as additional saleable products.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Exotic Plant Invasions on Soil Nutrient Cycling Processes

TL;DR: This work has reviewed studies that compare pool sizes and flux rates of the major nutrient cycles in invaded and noninvaded systems for invasions of 56 species and suggests that invasive plant species frequently increase biomass and net primary production, increase N availability, alter N fixation rates, and produce litter with higher decomposition rates than co-occurring natives.
Book ChapterDOI

Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries

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Cogongrass (Imperata cylindrica)—Biology, Ecology, and Management

TL;DR: Cogongrass is a major impediment to reforestation efforts in southeast Asia, the number one weed in agronomic and vegetable production in many parts of Africa, and is responsible for thousands of hectares of lost native habitat in the southeastern U.S.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of shade-tree species and spacing on soil and leaf nutrient concentrations in cocoa plantations at 8 years after establishment

TL;DR: It is indicated that non-legume timber trees with an optimized spacing regime can be used as overstorey shade trees for T. cacao in all of the plantations, however, all three plantations required fertilisation and better nutrient management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomass and nutrient accumulation of Piper aduncum and Imperata cylindrica fallows in the humid lowlands of Papua New Guinea

TL;DR: Piper accumulated large amounts of biomass and nutrients, particular K, which is an important nutrient for root crops that dominate the cropping phase in the shifting cultivation systems of the humid lowlands.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of chemical composition on nitrogen mineralization from green manures of seven tropical leguminous trees

TL;DR: This study confirms previous findings that N mineralization from tropical legumes is controlled more by soluble polyphenols than by lignin or N content.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of chemical composition of legume residues and initial soil pH on pH change of a soil after residue incorporation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the effect of applying legume residues differing in concentrations of N (4.3-45.5 mg g-1) and excess cations/organic anions (0.22-1.56 mmol g- 1) on pH change of five soils differing in initial pH (3.60-5.58) under sterile and non-sterile conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regulating n release from legume tree prunings by mixing residues of different quality

TL;DR: In this paper, a low-quality legume tree pruning (Peltophorum dasyrrachis) was mixed at various proportions with a high quality legume treetrip (Gliricidia sepium) for a 14-week period.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of chemical composition on N, Ca, and Mg release during incubation of leaves from selected agroforestry and fallow plant species

TL;DR: In this paper, Nitrogen, Ca and Mg release from leaves of 10 selected plant residues with varying chemical compositions was studied under laboratory conditions, and three patterns of N-release were observed over a seven week incubation period: Gliricidia sepium, Leucaena leucocephala, Mucuna pruriens andCentrosema pubescens leaves showed rapid N release, Acioa barteri andDialium guineense leaves immobilized N, and (c)Alchornea cordifolia, Anthonata macro
Journal ArticleDOI

Mineralization of nitrogen from decomposing leaves of multipurpose trees as affected by their chemical composition

TL;DR: In this paper, Nitrogen release patterns from seven leguminous trees were determined from 8-week laboratory incubations, and the quantities of extractable NH4+-N and NO3]-released to the soil to which the leaves had been applied was determined at weekly intervals and was related to the initial N, polyphenol, and lignin concentration of the leaves.
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