Co-application of biochar, vermicompost and silicon mitigates salinity stress and enhances maize productivity in saline-calcareous soils.
Qasim F, Jamil M, Ahmed M, Abbasi GH, Mehmood H
Soil Health
If you've ever tried growing vegetables in compacted, alkaline, or brackish soil and watched them wilt despite watering, this research points to a compost-plus-biochar recipe that could genuinely rescue that patch.
Salty soil is one of the toughest environments for crops — it messes with how plants absorb water and nutrients, basically making them thirsty even in wet ground. Researchers tested whether mixing three natural soil boosters together — charcoal-like biochar, worm compost, and a mineral called silicon — could help corn grow better under these tough conditions. The combination worked better than any single ingredient alone, helping the plants manage salt stress, fight cell damage, and ultimately produce more grain.
Key Findings
The combined biochar + vermicompost + silicon treatment was tested on naturally saline soil with an electrical conductivity of 9.6 dS/m — well above the threshold that stresses most crops
The integrated triple amendment improved ionic homeostasis and antioxidant defenses in maize plants, reducing salt-induced oxidative damage
Co-application synergistically enhanced maize productivity beyond what any single amendment achieved individually in field conditions
chevron_right Technical Summary
Combining biochar, vermicompost, and silicon as soil amendments significantly boosted maize yields in highly salty soils that would otherwise stifle plant growth, outperforming any single amendment used alone.
Abstract Preview
Soil salinity severely constrains maize productivity, especially in arid and semi-arid regions with calcareous and salt-affected soils. Conventional strategies often fail to restore soil health and...
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Maize, also known as corn in North American English, is a tall stout grass that produces cereal grain. The leafy stalk of the plant gives rise to male inflorescences or tassels which produce pollen, and female inflorescences called ears. The ears yield grain, known as kernels or seeds. In modern ...