Bulk density of Harran plain soils in relation to other soil properties

Authors

  • E. Sakin*, A. Deliboran and E. Tutar Soil Science and Plant Nutrition Department, Agriculture Faculty, Harran University, Osmanbey Campus - Sanlıurfa, Turkey. Author

Keywords:

Organic carbon, texture, bulk density, GAP region, Harran plain.

Abstract

Global warming is one of the most important problems of the present day. The increase of carbon dioxide (CO2)
and other greenhouse gases causes a great problem in the atmosphere. However, CO2 gas constituted the
biggest threat at present, though the other gases increase, too. One of the primary precautions to take for this
is the context of soil earth atmospheric CO2 through plants. Beside the context of soil carbon, some other
factors are also affecting this context. Some of them are texture, bulk density (BD), cation exchange capacity
(CEC), exchangeable cations (EC), soil reaction (pH) and electrical conductivity (Ec). In Harran plain, an organic
carbon amount ranged from 0.28 to 4.95 kg C m-2. The statistic analyses data in the factors are: BD, organic
carbon (OC), texture (clay, silt and sand%), CEC, EC, pH and Ec. The strongest correlation was found as BD and
OC (R2 = 99.96), but when compared with the other factors, it was detected as R2 = 99.4. The reason for its
height when we consider all the parameters is the involvement of organic carbon in the calculation. When we
deal with them individually, the correlation falls below 50%. In this study, a point of high correlation is made
between OC and BD. The study aims to determine, in the soils, BD, which is costly, hard and time consuming,
and OC which is known by means of this correlation. In the comparison analysis of the entire data and the
determination of the equations, student t test was used and the data were investigated at p<0.01 significance
levels. However, ANOVA techniques were used regularly in this comparison.

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Published

2020-03-27

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Section

Articles

How to Cite

Bulk density of Harran plain soils in relation to other soil properties. (2020). International Journal of Manures and Fertilizers, 8(1), 1-8. https://ijpp.org/journal/index.php/ijmf/article/view/103