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Experiments on the direct, cumulative and residual effects of town refuse manures and sewage sludge at Rothamsted and other centres 1940–1947

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

H. V. Garner
Affiliation:
Rothamsted Experimental Station, Harpenden, Herts.

Extract

Several town-refuse manures were compared with farmyard manure at Rothamsted and five other places between 1940 and 1947. The organic manures were used at 8 and 16 tons/acre with and without fertilizer nitrogen and potash. Direct and residual effects were measured on agricultural and horticultural crops.

All organic manures improved yields in the year of application, FYM most and consistently. The average percentage increases in yield produced by the pulverized refuses tested, in relation to the increase from an equal weight of FYM, were: sugar beet 22, mangolds 83, carrots, 85, potatoes 51. The corresponding figures for screened dust were: sugar beet 40, mangolds 28, carrots 41; the dust slightly depressed potato yields. Averaging all sixteen experiments on root crops, the pulverized refuses had 64% of the first-year effect of FYM and the screened dust 25%.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1966

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References

REFERENCES

Bould, C. (1945). Proc. Inst. Sewage Purif. part 2, p. 79.Google Scholar
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Patterson, H. D. & Watson, D. J. (1960). Rep. Rothamsted Exp. Stn for 1959, p. 164.Google Scholar
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