Evaluation of some Physicochemical Characteristics of Soil from Namtari, Yola South, Adamawa State, Nigeria

The objective of this paper is to evaluate some physicochemical characteristics of soil from Namtari Ward, Yola South LGA, Adamawa State, Nigeria using appropriate standard procedures. Data obtained shows that: Soil pH ranged from slightly acidic (7.04 ± 0.35) to slightly alkaline (7.37 ± 0.55), wh...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A. Garba, M. A. Qadeer, I. Kabiru
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Joint Coordination Centre of the World Bank assisted National Agricultural Research Programme (NARP) 2024-12-01
Series:Journal of Applied Sciences and Environmental Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ajol.info/index.php/jasem/article/view/284588
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850239356788277248
author A. Garba
M. A. Qadeer
I. Kabiru
author_facet A. Garba
M. A. Qadeer
I. Kabiru
author_sort A. Garba
collection DOAJ
description The objective of this paper is to evaluate some physicochemical characteristics of soil from Namtari Ward, Yola South LGA, Adamawa State, Nigeria using appropriate standard procedures. Data obtained shows that: Soil pH ranged from slightly acidic (7.04 ± 0.35) to slightly alkaline (7.37 ± 0.55), while organic matter content varied from 2.53 ± 0.28% (Karlahe) to 6.17 ± 0.67% (Changala). Nitrogen levels ranged from 0.126 ± 0.01 gkg⁻¹ (Dadi) to 0.316 ± 0.02 gkg⁻¹ (Changala), and phosphorus levels from 15.03 ± 1.5 gkg⁻¹ (Karlahe) to 18.91 ± 1.116 gkg⁻¹ (Dadi). Potassium levels spanned 0.73 ± 0.07 cmolkg⁻¹ (Dadi) to 1.956 ± 0.69 cmolkg⁻¹ (Changala), and moisture content was highest in Karlahe (61.16 ± 3.403%) and lowest in Changala (48.16 ± 7.42%). The results indicate significant changes in soil parameters, particularly a reduction in organic matter and moisture content, and slight changes in pH due to climate factors. These findings suggest that climate change contributes to soil degradation, with potential implications for agricultural productivity and ecosystem health. Practices like crop diversification, conservation tillage, and agroforestry were recommended to lessen the impact of climate variability on soil health and crop productivity. Providing farmers with training and resources will aid their shift toward these sustainable methods.
format Article
id doaj-art-a018d982c58b4fd8b25bdca131cf79a8
institution OA Journals
issn 2659-1502
2659-1499
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Joint Coordination Centre of the World Bank assisted National Agricultural Research Programme (NARP)
record_format Article
series Journal of Applied Sciences and Environmental Management
spelling doaj-art-a018d982c58b4fd8b25bdca131cf79a82025-08-20T02:01:10ZengJoint Coordination Centre of the World Bank assisted National Agricultural Research Programme (NARP)Journal of Applied Sciences and Environmental Management2659-15022659-14992024-12-012812Evaluation of some Physicochemical Characteristics of Soil from Namtari, Yola South, Adamawa State, NigeriaA. GarbaM. A. QadeerI. Kabiru The objective of this paper is to evaluate some physicochemical characteristics of soil from Namtari Ward, Yola South LGA, Adamawa State, Nigeria using appropriate standard procedures. Data obtained shows that: Soil pH ranged from slightly acidic (7.04 ± 0.35) to slightly alkaline (7.37 ± 0.55), while organic matter content varied from 2.53 ± 0.28% (Karlahe) to 6.17 ± 0.67% (Changala). Nitrogen levels ranged from 0.126 ± 0.01 gkg⁻¹ (Dadi) to 0.316 ± 0.02 gkg⁻¹ (Changala), and phosphorus levels from 15.03 ± 1.5 gkg⁻¹ (Karlahe) to 18.91 ± 1.116 gkg⁻¹ (Dadi). Potassium levels spanned 0.73 ± 0.07 cmolkg⁻¹ (Dadi) to 1.956 ± 0.69 cmolkg⁻¹ (Changala), and moisture content was highest in Karlahe (61.16 ± 3.403%) and lowest in Changala (48.16 ± 7.42%). The results indicate significant changes in soil parameters, particularly a reduction in organic matter and moisture content, and slight changes in pH due to climate factors. These findings suggest that climate change contributes to soil degradation, with potential implications for agricultural productivity and ecosystem health. Practices like crop diversification, conservation tillage, and agroforestry were recommended to lessen the impact of climate variability on soil health and crop productivity. Providing farmers with training and resources will aid their shift toward these sustainable methods. https://www.ajol.info/index.php/jasem/article/view/284588Adamawa State; Climate Change; Namtari Ward; Physiochemical Characteristic; Soil Degradation
spellingShingle A. Garba
M. A. Qadeer
I. Kabiru
Evaluation of some Physicochemical Characteristics of Soil from Namtari, Yola South, Adamawa State, Nigeria
Journal of Applied Sciences and Environmental Management
Adamawa State; Climate Change; Namtari Ward; Physiochemical Characteristic; Soil Degradation
title Evaluation of some Physicochemical Characteristics of Soil from Namtari, Yola South, Adamawa State, Nigeria
title_full Evaluation of some Physicochemical Characteristics of Soil from Namtari, Yola South, Adamawa State, Nigeria
title_fullStr Evaluation of some Physicochemical Characteristics of Soil from Namtari, Yola South, Adamawa State, Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of some Physicochemical Characteristics of Soil from Namtari, Yola South, Adamawa State, Nigeria
title_short Evaluation of some Physicochemical Characteristics of Soil from Namtari, Yola South, Adamawa State, Nigeria
title_sort evaluation of some physicochemical characteristics of soil from namtari yola south adamawa state nigeria
topic Adamawa State; Climate Change; Namtari Ward; Physiochemical Characteristic; Soil Degradation
url https://www.ajol.info/index.php/jasem/article/view/284588
work_keys_str_mv AT agarba evaluationofsomephysicochemicalcharacteristicsofsoilfromnamtariyolasouthadamawastatenigeria
AT maqadeer evaluationofsomephysicochemicalcharacteristicsofsoilfromnamtariyolasouthadamawastatenigeria
AT ikabiru evaluationofsomephysicochemicalcharacteristicsofsoilfromnamtariyolasouthadamawastatenigeria