REVIEW ON SALT-AFFECTED SOILS STUDIES IN SUDAN

  • Elfatih E. Awadelkarim Agricultural Research Corporation
  • A.I. Elgubshawi University of Science and Technology,
  • Hatim A. Sulfab University of Bahry, College of Agriculture
Keywords: Salt-affected soils, Application of organic, FYM, CHM

Abstract

Salt-affected soils in the Sudan fall under three soil orders: Vertisols, Aridisols and Entisols; in a
vast area between 14 and 22 latitudes’ covering an area of about 4.874 million hectares; only
268636 hectares were mapped till 2007.Soil salinity occurs at soil depths of 30-60 cm, often
associated with sodicity, the most commonly salts found are sodium chlorides and sodium
sulphates. Comprehensive studies on physical and chemical properties of salt-affected soil the
reclamation and management were undertaken by many research workers in Sudan.
The Relative hydraulic conductivity (RHC) of a salt-affected soil decreases with ESP increases
as C decreases; and at a given ESP, RHC increases as C increases; DI increases with increasing
ESP and decreasing C. The use of 5 and 10 tons gypsum/ha in ASSPC reduced the ESP from 18
to 5.5 and 7.3 and the ECe from 4.2 to 1.2 and 2.2 dS/m and significantly increased wheat grain
yield from 1141 to 1739 and 1926 kg/ha, respectively.
Application of organic and/or chemical fertilizers is very essential for crop production in high
terrace soils especially wheat. In addition to 2N, the use of 5 tons FYM/ha plus 1P followed by
10 tons FYM/ha without P is recommended as a package for wheat promotion in the high terrace
soils of Nile River. In another study, and in addition to a basal dose of 2N + 1P, the use of two
tons CHM/ha was recommended for wheat production as another option package to 5 tons
FYM/ha + 2N + 1P.
Phosphorus fertilization and P and K interaction significantly increased growth attributes and dry
matter of forage sorghum. Application of 2N NPK to wheat in EHRF resulted the highest wheat
grain yield (2979 kg/ha) compared with other DNS. In another study and in the same site, the use
of 1N NPK topped by 1N ASN gave the highest wheat grain yield (2935 kg/ha). Dry matter yield
of forage sorghum increased significantly with increase of nitrogen level, with decrease in
irrigation interval and with gypsum application. Watering of lucerne every 7 days with addition
of CHM was found superior treatment among others treatments (gypsum, Sulfur, dry sewage,
CHM plus gypsum).

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Author Biographies

Elfatih E. Awadelkarim, Agricultural Research Corporation

Agricultural Research Corporation, Wad Medani, Sudan

A.I. Elgubshawi, University of Science and Technology,

Sudan University of Science and Technology, Faculty of Agriculture, Khartoum

Hatim A. Sulfab, University of Bahry, College of Agriculture

University of Bahry, College of Agriculture, Khartoum

Published
2017-11-30
How to Cite
Awadelkarim, E. E., Elgubshawi, A., & Sulfab, H. A. (2017). REVIEW ON SALT-AFFECTED SOILS STUDIES IN SUDAN. IJRDO-Journal of Agriculture and Research (ISSN: 2455-7668), 3(11), 17-29. https://doi.org/10.53555/ar.v3i11.231