CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF THE GREEN BIOMASS OF INDIGENOUS TREES AND SHRUBS IN THE HIGHLANDS OF CENTRAL ETHIOPIA: IMPLICATIONS FOR SOIL FERTILITY MANAGEMENT

Authors

  • M. Kindu

Keywords:

Foliage, flower bud, macronutrient, lignin, soluble phenolics

Abstract

KINDU, M., GLATZEL, G., SIEGHARDT, M., BIRHANE, K. & TAYE, B. 2008. Chemical composition of
the green biomass of indigenous trees and shrubs in the highlands of Central Ethiopia: implications for
soil fertility management. The use of green biomass of indigenous trees and shrubs to supply nutrients to
agricultural crops is a traditional practice in the highlands of Central Ethiopia. A study was carried out from
2004 till 2006 to characterize the quality of the green biomass of indigenous trees and shrubs based on the
content of water, macronutrients, lignin and soluble phenolics. The tree and shrub species studied were
Senecio gigas, Hagenia abyssinica, Dombeya torrida, Buddleja polystachya and Chamaecytisus palmensis. The first
four are indigenous species, while the last is an exotic species. The water content of the foliage in S. gigas
was the highest. The N content of the foliage of the indigenous species was comparable with C. palmensis.
The highest K content was found in the foliage, flower bud and stem of S. gigas. The lignin content in the
foliage and flower bud of H. abyssinica was the lowest. Based on the N content, lignin and soluble phenolics,
indigenous species had intermediate to high quality, whereas exotic species had high quality green biomass
for managing soil fertility.

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Published

2022-06-22

How to Cite

M. Kindu. (2022). CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF THE GREEN BIOMASS OF INDIGENOUS TREES AND SHRUBS IN THE HIGHLANDS OF CENTRAL ETHIOPIA: IMPLICATIONS FOR SOIL FERTILITY MANAGEMENT. Journal of Tropical Forest Science (JTFS), 20(3), 167–174. Retrieved from https://jtfs.frim.gov.my/jtfs/article/view/766

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