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108132

Role of Organic Food Wastes on Soil Fertility, Growth and Yield of Stevia Crop

Article

Last updated: 01 Jan 2025

Subjects

-

Tags

Soil fertility and plant nutrition

Abstract

A field experiment was conducted at the Experimental farm, Soils and water Department, Faculty of Agric., Al-Azahar Univ., Assuit, Egypt, during two successive growing seasons of 2018 and 2019. The study aims to assess the influence of organic food wastes (Eggshell, Banana peels, Green pea peels and Potato peels) are sources of some nutrients and Soybean protein isolate as a source of nitrogen on the soil fertility, growth parameters, yield and quality of stevia plant under drip irrigation system.
The result showed positive increase in all growth parameters and yield of sativa plant as well as improving soil properties by adding organic food wastes. The most effective treatment was the combination of C4 treatment (50% organic-N from isolated soy protein, 12.5% banana peels, 12.5% eggshell, 12.5% green pea peels and 12.5% potato peels). The highest total chlorophyll value of 4.48 and 3.61 mg/g fresh weight in the 1stand 2nd cutting, respectively in the 1st season were obtained under C4 treatment. The corresponding values were 4.89 and 4.02 mg/g fresh weight in the 2nd season. The highest values of dry leaf yield 843 kg plot-1 and biological yield 1.60 kg plot-1 were noticed under C2 treatment in the 2nd cut in the first season. In the second season, the corresponding values were 1242 and 2.19 kg plot-1 resulted from C4 treatment in the 2nd cut. The highest values of protein content 10.73 and 13.72% in 1st and 2nd cut, respectively were realized under C4 treatment in the 1st season. The corresponding values were 15.0 and 18.11% for C4 treatment in the 2nd season. In the 1st season, the highest values of stevioside content were 8.49 and 8.98 % in the 1st and 2nd cut for C4 and C2, respectively. In the 2nd season, the highest values of stevioside content were 9.69 and 10.05 % in the 1st and 2nd cut for C2 treatments, respectively. Available N in C0 treatment Control (without applied fertilizers) had the lowest values of both seasons compared to the C4 treatment that had the highest values of both forms in both seasons. The overall results suggest that organic food wastes combination could be advised to grow stevia plant and improving soil properties of Egypt.

DOI

10.21608/ejss.2020.34458.1368

Keywords

stevia plant, stevioside, Organic food wastes, Soil fertility, Soybean protein, banana peels, Eggshell

Authors

First Name

Mohamed

Last Name

Youssef

MiddleName

Ahmed

Affiliation

Department of Soils and Water Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture, Al-Azhar University, Assiut 71524, Egypt

Email

mayoussef@azhar.edu.eg

City

assiut

Orcid

-

First Name

Asem

Last Name

Abdel-Gawad

MiddleName

mohmed

Affiliation

Department of Soils and Water Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture, Al-Azhar University, Assiut 71524, Egypt

Email

asem_11111@yahoo.com

City

ASSIUT

Orcid

-

First Name

Yasser

Last Name

Khalifa

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

2Agronomy. Dept., Fac. of Agric., AL-Azhar Univ., Assiut branch

Email

yasserbeet@yahoo.com

City

Assiut

Orcid

0000-0002-9026-4936

Volume

60

Article Issue

3

Related Issue

16674

Issue Date

2020-09-01

Receive Date

2020-07-04

Publish Date

2020-09-01

Page Start

335

Page End

347

Print ISSN

0302-6701

Online ISSN

2357-0369

Link

https://ejss.journals.ekb.eg/article_108132.html

Detail API

https://ejss.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=108132

Order

10

Type

Original Article

Type Code

19

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Egyptian Journal of Soil Science

Publication Link

https://ejss.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Role of Organic Food Wastes on Soil Fertility, Growth and Yield of Stevia Crop

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023