7 resultados para 325-M0035A
em Universitätsbibliothek Kassel, Universität Kassel, Germany
Resumo:
Phosphorus (P) deficiency is a major constraint to pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum L.) growth on acid sandy soils of the West African Sahel. To develop cost-effective fertilization strategies for cash poor farmers, experiments with pearl millet were conducted in southwestern Niger. Treatments comprised single superphosphate hill-placed at rates of 1, 3, 5 or 7 kg P ha^−1 factorially combined with broadcast P at a rate of 13 kg ha^−1. Nitrogen was applied as calcium ammonium nitrate at rates of 30 and 45 kg ha^−1. At low soil moisture, placement of single superphosphate in immediate proximity to the seed reduced seedling emergence. Despite these negative effects on germination, P placement resulted in much faster growth of millet seedlings than did broadcast P. With P application, potassium nutrition of millet was improved and seedling nitrogen uptake increased two- to three-fold, indicating that nitrogen was not limiting early millet growth. Averaged over the 1995 and 1996 cropping seasons, placed applications of 3, 5 and 7 kg P ha^−1 led to 72%, 81% and 88% respectively, of the grain yield produced by broadcasting 13 kg P ha^−1. Nitrogen application did not show major effects on grain yield unless P requirements were met. A simple economic analysis revealed that the profitability of P application, defined as additional income per unit of fertilizer, was highest for P placement at 3 and 5 kg ha^−1.
Resumo:
Cereal yield increases in legume rotations on west African soils were the subject of much recent research aiming at the development of more productive cropping systems for the mainly subsistence-oriented agriculture in this region. However, little has been done to elucidate the possible contribution of soil microbiological factors to these rotation effects. Therefore a pot trial was conducted using legume rotation and continuous cereal soils each from one site in Burkina Faso and two sites in Togo where cropping system experiments had been conducted over 4 yrs. All soils were planted with seedlings of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L. Moench). From 21 days after sowing onwards relative growth rates in rotation soils were higher than in the continuous cereal soils, resulting in between 69 and 500% higher shoot dry matter of rotation sorghum compared to sorghum growing in continuous cereal soils. Across sites rotation soils were characterized by higher pH, higher microbial N and a lower microbial biomass C/N ratio and, with the exception of one site, a higher fungal biomass in the rhizosphere. The bacterial and eukaryal community structure in the soil, assessed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), differed between sites. However, only at one site differed the bacterial and the eukaryal community structure in the rotation soil significantly from that in the continuous cereal soil. Although the results of this study confirmed the marked plantgrowth differences between sub-Saharan legume-rotation soils and their continuous cereal counterparts they also showed the difficulties to differentiate possible microbiological causes from their effects.
Resumo:
Intensification processes in homegardens of the Nuba Mountains, Sudan, raise concerns about strongly positive carbon (C) and nutrient balances which are expected to lead to substantial element losses from these agroecosystems, in particular via soil gaseous emissions. Therefore, this thesis aimed at the quantification of C, nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) input and output fluxes with a special focus on soil gaseous losses, and the calculation of respective element balances. A further focus in this thesis was rainfall, a valuable resource for rain-fed agriculture in the Nuba Mountains. To minimize negative consequences of the high variability of rainfall, risk reducing mechanisms were developed by rain-fed farmers that may lose their efficacy in the course of climate change effects predicted for East Africa. Therefore, the second objective of this study was to examine possible changes in rainfall amounts during the last 60 years and to provide reliable risk and probability statements of rainfall-induced events of agricultural importance to rain-fed farmers in the Nuba Mountains. Soil gaseous emissions of C (in form of CO2) and N (in form of NH3 and N2O) of two traditional and two intensified homegardens were determined with a portable dynamic closed chamber system. For C gaseous emission rates reached their peak at the onset of the rainy season (2,325 g CO2-C ha-1 h-1 in an intensified garden type) and for N during the rainy season (16 g NH3-N ha-1 h-1 and 11.3 g N2O-N ha-1 h-1, in a traditional garden type). Data indicated cumulative annual emissions of 5,893 kg CO2-C ha-1, 37 kg NH3-N ha-1, and 16 kg N2O-N ha-1. For the assessment of the long-term productivity of the two types of homegardens and the identification of pathways of substantial element losses, a C and nutrient budget approach was used. In three traditional and three intensified homegardens observation plots were selected. The following variables were quantified on each plot between June and December in 2010: soil amendments, irrigation, biomass removal, symbiotic N2 fixation, C fixation by photosynthesis, atmospheric wet and dry deposition, leaching and soil gaseous emissions. Annual balances for C and nutrients amounted to -21 kg C ha-1, -70 kg N ha-1, 9 kg P ha-1 and -117 kg K ha-1 in intensified homegardens and to -1,722 kg C ha-1, -167 kg N ha-1, -9 kg P ha-1 and -74 kg K ha-1 in traditional homegardens. For the analysis of rainfall data, the INSTAT+ software allowed to aggregate long-term daily rainfall records from the Kadugli and Rashad weather stations into daily, monthly and annual intervals and to calculate rainfall-induced events of agricultural importance. Subsequently, these calculated values and events were checked for possible monotonic trends by Mann-Kendall tests. Over the period from 1970 to 2009, annual rainfall did not change significantly for either station. However, during this period an increase of low rainfall events coinciding with a decline in the number of medium daily rainfall events was observed in Rashad. Furthermore, the availability of daily rainfall data enabled frequency and conditional probability calculations that showed either no statistically significant changes or trends resulting only in minor changes of probabilities.
„Alles hat seine Stunde. Für jedes Geschehen unter dem Himmel gibt es eine bestimmte Zeit“ (Koh 3,1)
Resumo:
Armut/Reichtum, Arbeit, Glück, Tod, Gott und Mensch sowie Zeit – Dies alles sind Themen, die als existentiell bezeichnet werden können. Mit ihnen beschäftigt sich das alttestamentliche Buch Kohelet, das ca. zwischen 250 und 190 v. Chr. entstanden ist. Trotz des Alters dieses Buches behandelt Kohelet Fragen, die hoch aktuell sind: Gibt es einen Gott? Greift dieser ein? Ist Reichtum etwas Erstrebenswertes? Warum mühen wir uns so ab, wenn wir doch sowieso sterben und all das Erarbeitete hinterlassen müssen? Und haben wir überhaupt Entscheidungs- und Handlungsfreiheit? Ist nicht vielleicht sogar alles von Gott bestimmt? Die Fragen hängen eng mit dem eigenen Selbstbild zusammen. Besonders im Jugendalter befindet sich der Mensch auf der Suche nach einer Identität, nach Erkenntnissen und einer eigenen Weltanschauung. Kohelets Fragen gewinnen in dieser Zeit an Relevanz. Das alttestamentliche Buch kann insbesondere in dieser Lebensphase fruchtbar gemacht werden und anregend sein. Es kann Heranwachsende dazu auffordern, das bisherige Selbstbild und die eigene Weltanschauung zu hinterfragen. Aus diesen Überlegungen heraus ergibt sich das Buch Kohelet als wertvoller Gesprächspartner Jugendlicher. Daneben erscheint es auch naheliegend, Jugendliche mit Kohelet ins Gespräch zu bringen, weil der Adressat des Buches nach Schmitz der junge Erwachsene sei (vgl. Schmitz, 2004, S. 325). Obwohl eine Relevanz des Buches für Jugendliche auszumachen ist, kann das Buch Kohelet bisher als „bibeldidaktisches Stiefkind“ (G. Langenhorst, 2004, S. 317) angesehen werden. Vereinzelt finden sich Umsetzungsvorschläge des Buches im Unterricht. In Lehrplänen wird es jedoch kaum aufgegriffen. Hinzu kommt, dass sich kaum Ausführungen dazu finden, wie Jugendliche die Gedanken Kohelets überhaupt verstehen. Aus diesem Grund hat die vorliegende Arbeit das Ziel, dies in Erfahrung zu bringen. Um die Ausgangsfrage zu beantworten, wurde eine empirische Untersuchung der Rezeption durchgeführt. Dabei wurde das Zeitgedicht des Koheletbuches fokussiert, das das menschliche Leben als Ganzes thematisiert und implizit ein Menschenbild entfaltet. Über die Frage der Rezeption durch OberstufenschülerInnen hinaus, möchte die Arbeit auch Rückschlüsse auf eine mögliche Beschäftigung mit Kohelet im Religionsunterricht schließen. Zunächst wird das hier grundgelegte Verständnis von Textrezeption erläutert. Daraufhin wird der Blick auf die Texteinheit gerichtet. Diese wird eingehend exegetisch untersucht, wobei auch die verschiedenen Lesarten thematisiert werden. In einem nächsten Kapitel rücken die SchülerInnen als Adoleszente ins Zentrum, woraufhin die Untersuchung des Dialogs zwischen Text und SchülerInnen und somit der Rezeption vollzogen wird. Den Schluss bildet ein Fazit mit einem Ausblick.