Case studies on the assessment of local organic fertilisers (OFs) in their quality (decomposition characteristics and nutrient availability for crops) are few in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). This study assessed the… Click to show full abstract
Case studies on the assessment of local organic fertilisers (OFs) in their quality (decomposition characteristics and nutrient availability for crops) are few in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). This study assessed the quality of local OFs from the Ethiopian Rift Valley. The decomposition characteristics were assessed by acid detergent fibre analysis methods, while the short-term nitrogen availability was assessed by a combination of laboratory incubations and inorganic nitrogen and acid detergent soluble nitrogen determinations. A commercial hand-held reflectometer (RQFlex) was used for determining nitrogen components. The mean acid detergent soluble organic matter contents exceeded 250 mg g−1, indicating the OF feedstock contained much of the readily decomposable organic matter. Some of the indigenous compost (kosi) samples showed net nitrogen immobilisation during the initial period of incubation, followed by net nitrogen mineralisation in one month of incubation with 4% of the nitrogen mineralisation rate. Kosi should be applied to a field one month before seeding. Short-term nitrogen availability from kosi was too low to substitute for inorganic fertilisers. The combination of the simple analysis methods shown in this study is a quick, cost-saving, and accurate quality assessment approach for OFs, which can be useful in the field and at experimental stations in SSA.
               
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