Influence of Oil Palm Empty Fruit Bunch Biochar on Floodwater pH and Yield Components of Rice Cultivated on Acid Sulphate Soil under Rice Intensification Practices
1) Department of Land Management, Faculty of Agriculture, Universiti Putra Malaysia
2) Department of Crop Science, Faculty of Agriculture, Universiti Putra Malaysia
Rice has a vital role in food security but the production is limited in
infertile and degraded soils. Rice is cultivated on acid sulphate soil
in the coastal area of Peninsular Malaysia. Soil amendment using
biological charcoal (biochar) increases the soil fertility. Thus, empty
fruit bunch biochar (EFBB) was applied in a pot experiment under a
controlled environment using an organic system of rice intensification
(SRI) practice and its effects on the floodwater pH, acid sulphate soil
properties and growth performance of rice and yield of rice MR219 were
preliminarily investigated. EFBB increased grain yield by 141 to 472%.
Plant growth and yield parameters in EFBB amended soils were
significantly higher than in soil without biochar. The number of tillers
increased significantly with the increase in biochar applied; 28
tillers were produced in the control, while up to 80 tillers were
produced in the plots applied 40 t ha–1 EFBB. Moreover, the decline of Al3+ in flood water indicated that EFBB mitigated Al3+
toxicity. Soil water pH increased from 3.5 to 6 with increasing EFBB
application rates. The grain yield was linearly correlated to the
application rate of EFBB. This pot study demonstrates that the
application of EFBB combined with organic fertilization and intermittent
irrigation has the potential to improve rice yield on acid sulphate
soil. Further study in the field is warranted to determine the effect of
EFBB on large scale rice production.
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