OFR-47(11)-83 Ecological Studies On The Revegetation Process Of Surface Coal Mined Areas In North Dakota - 11. Effect Of Amendments On Soil-Plant-Nutrient Relations Under Controlled Conditions

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 64
- File Size:
- 19386 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1982
Abstract
Several growth chamber and laboratory experiments were conducted to study the germination behavior of plant species on mine spoils and plant growth responses to nutrients on spoils and topsoils. Experiments were conducted to study the germination potential of some native and introduced species under various conditions. The seeds of green needlegrass, side oats grama, thickspike wheatgrass, crested wheatgrass, birdsfoot trefoil and emerald crownvetch were less tolerant, whereas those of alkali sacaton. durar hard fescue, slender wheatgrass, yellow sweetclover and alfalfa were most tolerant to the sodic mine spoil conditions. Addition of leonardite improved the germination potential of some of the poor genninators. Slender wheatgrass and yellow sweetclover were used as test plants to study the fertility status and productivity potential of stockpiled topsoils and spoils collected from Center. Glenharold and South Beulah of North Dakota. The topsoils were neither saline nor sodic but low in N and P. The spoils were neutral to alkaline with SAIL of 12-32, EC of 1.8-5.5 mmhos/cm, Olsen's P< µ4g/g, and total N <0.07%. Application of N and P together to the topsoils increased the yield of wheatgrass and sweetclover by 88% and 70% of their respective maximum yields, whereas near maximum yields were obtained for both the species by the same treatments to the spoils. The average yields on topsoils were higher than the yields on spoils. The concentrations of major nutrients were higher in plants grown on topsoil, whereas the opposite was true with the concentrations of Mn, Zn, and Cu. Growth chamber experiments were also conducted to study the growth responses of alfalfa, oats and slender wheat grass by the application of Mn and Zn to a sodic coal mine spoil which was previously used for pot culture experiments. Significant growth responses to Mn and Zn were observed in alfalfa but not in oats or slender wheatgrass. Fertilizing the spoil with Mn along with NPK increased the yield of alfalfa to 85% and with Mn + Zn to 99%. Growth responses and plant composition results of this study confirm that the application of major nutrients to spoils can accentuate Zn and Mn deficiencies in some plants.
Citation
APA:
(1982) OFR-47(11)-83 Ecological Studies On The Revegetation Process Of Surface Coal Mined Areas In North Dakota - 11. Effect Of Amendments On Soil-Plant-Nutrient Relations Under Controlled ConditionsMLA: OFR-47(11)-83 Ecological Studies On The Revegetation Process Of Surface Coal Mined Areas In North Dakota - 11. Effect Of Amendments On Soil-Plant-Nutrient Relations Under Controlled Conditions. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1982.